By Dara Kam | October 1, 2019
Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, the Cabinet's lone Democrat, is pushing Gov. Ron DeSantis and her Cabinet colleagues to overhaul the clemency process, which is used to restore voting rights and other civil rights.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | September 27, 2019
Democrats aren't willing to let go of their existing lawsuits seeking records and testimony on Trump, even as their focus has shifted in the past week.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | September 27, 2019
Democrats aren't willing to let go of their existing lawsuits seeking records and testimony on Trump, even as their focus has shifted in the past week.
By Jane Wester | September 27, 2019
U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-New York, was sued over the management of her @AOC Twitter account the same day that the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a trial judge's ruling that President Donald Trump violated the First Amendment by blocking people from his @realDonaldTrump Twitter account.
By Cheryl Miller | September 26, 2019
"We are the most progressive state in the country with the most regressive medical malpractice laws in the country," the president of Consumer Watchdog says.
By Mike Scarcella and Nate Robson | September 26, 2019
Neal Katyal. Joseph DiGenova. Laurence Tribe. Matthew Whitaker. And many others. Here's a broad roundup of what lawyers are saying about the Trump-Ukraine call that's gripping the nation.
By Tony Mauro | September 25, 2019
Rehnquist's 1992 book "Grand Inquests" chronicled the impeachment of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase in 1805 and President Andrew Johnson in 1868.
By Tony Mauro | September 25, 2019
Rehnquist's 1992 book "Grand Inquests" chronicled the impeachment of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase in 1805 and President Andrew Johnson in 1868.
By Tom McParland | September 25, 2019
The NAACP sued Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont and Secretary of State Denise Merrill, alleging that the state's redistricting plan inflated the voting power of white residents in mostly rural prison districts at the expense of predominantly black and Latino residents in prisoners' more urban home districts.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Tom McParland | September 25, 2019
The NAACP sued Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont and Secretary of State Denise Merrill over what it called "prisoner gerrymandering," alleging that the redistricting plan inflated the voting power of white residents in mostly rural prison districts at the expense of predominantly black and Latino residents in prisoners' more urban home districts.
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