Could financial disclosure reports from Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito revive the debate over Supreme Court ethics
Author: John Fritze, USA TODAY
Roberts for ’24? Poll finds chief more popular than Biden, Trump despite Supreme Court woes
Chief Justice John Roberts performed well in a Gallup poll in part because many Americans – nearly a third – had no opinion of him at all.
Federal appeals court rules Catholic school was permitted to fire gay counselor
Fitzgerald worked for 14 years as a guidance counselor at Roncalli High School when school officials discovered she was married to another woman.
How a Second Amendment case at the Supreme Court is putting gun rights groups in a jam
A lower court called Zackey Rahimi, the subject of a domestic restraining order, “hardly a model citizen.” Should he still be allowed to own a gun?
Student debt: Why Biden’s backup plan may wind up in trouble again at the Supreme Court
Biden rolled out a Plan B after the Supreme Court struck down his $400 billion effort to forgive student debt. The new plan may also draw lawsuits.
Second Amendment: Supreme Court to decide whether domestic abusers are entitled to guns
The Supreme Court case follows a decision last year that struck down a law limiting who may obtain a license to carry a handgun in public.
Supreme Court live updates: SCOTUS rulings on Biden’s student loan program coming today
The nation’s highest court is wrapping up a historic term Friday with decisions on Biden’s student loan program and LGBTQ rights.
Supreme Court backs Christian worker who wanted Sundays off in case that may have wide impact
The case, involving a Christian postal worker, has been called one of the most wide-reaching religious liberty cases in a roughly half a century.
Supreme Court blocks use of affirmative action at Harvard, UNC in blow to diversity efforts: Live updates
Members of the Supreme Court’s conservative majority, including Chief Justice John Roberts, had long signaled skepticism about affirmative action.
Stalking or free speech? Critics say Supreme Court just made it harder to stop stalkers
Billy Counterman sent hundreds of messages to a singer/songwriter on Facebook. The question for the Supreme Court: Were the messages protected speech?