The president’s Department of Justice keeps lying brazenly to judges, and more often than not, it refuses to correct the record.
Slate legal columnist Dahlia Lithwick issued a warning Wednesday that the U.S. Supreme Court has effectively opened the door ...
On Wednesday, the justices will hear oral arguments over the president’s move to impose sweeping tariffs on virtually all imported goods.
President Donald Trump's Justice Department just got caught lying in court — and it certainly wasn't the first time, ...
Whether a vision of the Court might affect coverage; facing new questions of identity and gender, three Justices who are women and the Court reflecting a larger social anxiety; the “Roberts Court”; ...
Trump filed claims insisting that he deserved this taxpayer-funded windfall because he’d been "persecuted" by various federal ...
Law journalist Dahlia Lithwick profiles female lawyers and judges who challenged the Trump administration in her new book, 'Lady Justice.' In ‘Lady Justice,’ Dahlia Lithwick profiles women who used ...
Sign up for The Media Today, CJR’s daily newsletter. More on the topic of my previous post: lessons one might draw from Clinton’s campaign. Over at Slate‘s XX ...
The reliably chipper Rachel Maddow takes a step back from the granular parsing of Elena Kagan's political beliefs to ask the big-picture question: Just how much of a friend to Democrats is she? Kagan ...
Accredited access to the Court; reading the contrast between what the Court says about free speech as a legal doctrine and the practicalities of the Court’s institutional position; andthe Internet as ...