Free Immigration Is a Core American Value
Just consider the policies that the Founding Fathers embraced.
Just consider the policies that the Founding Fathers embraced.
Plus: Some State of the Union fact checking, a livestream discussion about gun rights and violence, and more...
Now a judge has cleared him of wrongdoing and struck down the rule used to justify the arrest.
"There is an obligation both to incarcerated persons and the taxpayers not to keep someone incarcerated for longer than they should be," a Louisiana district attorney said. "Timely release is not only a legal obligation, but arguably of equal importance, a moral obligation."
"I think, in principle, it's ridiculous to have to deal with this eminent domain bullshit on the grounds of the Alamo," says owner Vince Cantu.
"In short, the controlling motivations for the suspension were the interest in bringing down a reform prosecutor," the judge wrote.
The former Libertarian congressman was in the Capitol Wednesday drumming up a Hail Mary quest to become speaker of the House.
People in power lean on private businesses to impose authoritarian policies forbidden to the government.
The liberal justice seems ready to fight legal conservatives on their own ground.
An appeals court rejected a qualified immunity defense.
The city of Vallejo, California, has paid millions in recent years to settle excessive force lawsuits against its heavy-handed police force.
What power lets Congress exempt harassment allegations from NDAs?
Originalist scholar Larry Solum suggests KBJ could be the Left's Antonin Scalia.
Plus: Warnock wins, over-the-counter Narcan closer to reality, San Francisco backtracks on killer robots, and more...
Plus: The editors consider a listener question on the involuntary hospitalization of the mentally ill.
His call for the "termination" of the Constitution is the latest in a long line of dangerous efforts to legitimate the indefensible.
Civil liberties groups say Adams' plan violates constitutional rights protecting people with mental illness from being confined against their will simply for existing.
Congress should not forget that they can legislate in response to Supreme Court rulings.
The link between Bostock v. Clayton County and Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina
Plus: A flawed study on marijuana risks, the collapsing publishing-house merger, and more...
Rethinking the constitutional defense of reproductive rights after Dobbs via the Ninth Amendment
Plus: Users surge on decentralized social media platform Mastodon, the fall of city drugstores, and more...
On Tuesday, voters in Alabama, Tennessee, Vermont, and Oregon approved ballot measures that removed exceptions to anti-slavery laws in their state's constitutions, effectively banning forced prison labor.
This November, voters will have the chance to abolish it. They should.
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals is right to notice that the CFPB is unique even among federal agencies that don't get their funding from Congress.
Plus: Federal court dismisses state challenge to student loan debt forgiveness, not all independent contractors want to be employees, and more...
The free market allows people to cooperate, fix errors, and adapt to changing circumstances.
The middle ground in Moore v. Harper (plus a few additional thoughts on redistricting remedies)
Understanding the jurisprudence of the conservative Supreme Court justice
The proposals were agreed on by members of the conservative, libertarian, and progressive teams participating in the NCC's earlier constitution drafting project.
While animal-rights activists still risk trespassing charges, the state of Iowa cannot make it illegal to record while trespassing on private property.
The case is now on appeal after a lower court said the ban on websites promoting prostitution didn't concern protected speech.
The senator's avowed devotion to federalism is no match for his political ambitions.
The Republican senator improbably claims his bill is authorized by the 14th Amendment and the Commerce Clause.
Whether voters will approve of whatever draft the government writes next remains to be seen.
Plus: The editors answer a question from a U.S. House candidate.
The president's attack on the "extreme ideology" of "MAGA Republicans" elides the tension between majority rule and individual freedom.
The 54,000-word draft document is a feeding frenzy of political interests looking to codify special rights and privileges.
Plus: "Reparations" for the news industry, the disappearance of starter homes, and more...
A review of Adrian Vermeule's Common Good Constitutionalism
A comprehensive catalog of every case in which the Court considered a constitutional challenge to an act of Congress
A new study sheds interesting light on these questions.
The former president may be a hypocrite, but at least he knows his own rights.
The Chief Justice has been the focus of widespread criticism during the last Supreme Court term. But he deserves credit for getting virtually every single major case right.
Plus: Video game play time doesn't affect well-being, crypto groups applaud the Virtual Currency Tax Fairness Act, and more...
A 1942 decision about the Commerce Clause takes on new importance post-Roe.