By Jimmy Hoover | August 2, 2024
At a time when the court's approval rating has sagged to near-historic lows, Elena Kagan has appeared sympathetic to progressive and Democratic critics who see the current court as driven by a conservative agenda.
By Jimmy Hoover | August 1, 2024
"The unprecedented decision made by the Supreme Court's misguided majority massively weakened the rule of law as it applies to presidents," said Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii.
By Scott Colesanti | August 1, 2024
Last month's demise of the judicial Chevron deference doctrine has been well- chronicled. This article vets key cases and pleading realities to weigh the effect of the court's dramatic repudiation.
By Mason Lawlor | July 31, 2024
Judges Robin Rosenbaum, Kevin Newsom and Gerald Tjoflat formed the circuit's panel. Rosenbaum wrote the majority opinion, issued on July 29, while she and Judge Kevin C. Newsom offered separate concurring opinions calling on the Eleventh Circuit to fix qualified-immunity jurisprudence.
By Jimmy Hoover | July 31, 2024
"Amending the Constitution of the United States is something between logistically extremely difficult and practically impossible, especially about a contested issue," said Fordham University law professor Aaron Saiger.
By Jimmy Hoover | July 30, 2024
Led by the coal-mining state of West Virginia, a group of Republican attorneys general say the Environmental Protection Agency is trying to circumvent recent court decisions blocking earlier versions of its anti-coal agenda.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Barry Kamins | July 30, 2024
"The Court of Appeals envisioned that it will be a 'rare' case in which the police stop a vehicle in their community caretaking capacity," writes former New York Supreme Court Judge Barry Kamins.
By Jimmy Hoover | July 29, 2024
The president's proposal calls for term limits for justices, a binding ethics code and a constitutional amendment to overturn the court's recent ruling on presidential immunity.
By Jimmy Hoover | July 26, 2024
Since 2012, Gupta Wessler has become a mainstay of the Supreme Court bar, and has continued to rack up victories on behalf of consumers and workers even after the court was transformed with the addition of three conservative Trump appointees.
By Avalon Zoppo | July 26, 2024
"Because the [Supreme] Court wasn't more expressive in providing guidance, we're going to continue to see turmoil and confusion in the lower courts," said SMU Dedman School of Law professor Eric Ruben.
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