Trump Had 60 Days To End the Iran War. Instead, He's Just Pretending It's Over.
Legally, Trump must either cease operations or ask Congress for approval. He did neither, and Congress just went on recess.
Legally, Trump must either cease operations or ask Congress for approval. He did neither, and Congress just went on recess.
Cole Tomas Allen's actions just don't make sense, even in his own words, or in a time of political polarization.
In a bid to “reaffirm its exclusive jurisdiction” over prediction markets such as Kalshi, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission is suing six states for interfering in federally regulated financial markets.
Bootleggers, Baptists, and the fight over who gets to write America's self-driving car rules.
Department of Homeland Security
Plus: FISA reauthorization, driverless trucks in California, and an Epstein suicide note.
Foreign Law in American Courts
An interesting illustration of how American courts handle (correctly, I think) foreign marriages.
After California made this same mistake in 1999, it took 12 years to dig out of the hole. Taxpayers footed the bill.
The term “hate speech” gets thrown around a lot, but it’s legally protected in the U.S.
Mere proposals can change the risk calculus for business and investors. Politicians, and the public, should be wary.
Europe’s resistance to immigration is a path to budgetary disaster.
Plus: The Supreme Court says “demands for a charity’s private member or donor information” raises First Amendment problems.
Making less harmful products harder to get pushes people toward more dangerous ones.
“The sale of E15 year-round would help the ethanol industry and no one else,” says one agricultural policy expert.
The Trump Administration is refusing to defend a D.C. Circuit decision upholding a flawed energy conservation ruie.
The brief, which asks a federal judge to reconsider an injunction blocking the project, reads like it was transcribed from the president's Truth Social account.
Conservative legal commentator Gregg Nunziata outlines reasons why conservatives should reject broad views of executive power.
Beyond Belief explains how the "evidence revolution" is helping practitioners, policymakers, and the public understand what really works.
The government wants access to millions of cell phone location histories. The Supreme Court will decide what the Fourth Amendment allows.
Federal law defines the term but there is no federal statute to charge someone with "domestic terrorism."
Even Republican critics of the Federal Reserve chairman's performance rejected the notion that he had broken the law by lying about the renovation of the central bank's headquarters.
Small-government conservatives are tripping over themselves to give millions of taxpayer dollars to billionaires.
A retired liberal justice does not credit the shadow docket hysteria, nor does former Judge Michael McConnell
Some states still allow vengeful spouses to sue a third party for destroying their marriages.
The feds have been demanding that tech companies identify the administration's anonymous online critics. That violates the First Amendment.
To justify punishing a legislator for his speech, a FIRE brief notes, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth relies on a Supreme Court precedent that is clearly inapposite.
Sen. Ron Wyden warns that Americans would be “stunned” at how officials have used the law.
The bureau reportedly investigated the author of a New York Times story that made FBI Director Kash Patel look bad.
William Baude and Richard Re respond to a common narrative
Separation of Church and State
The 5th Circuit upheld a controversial law requiring Texas schools to display the Ten Commandments.
Those who don't like how the Supreme Court handles requests for interim relief might like solutions to the problem even less.
Plus: Does Trump expect to lose the birthright citizenship case?
"The New Deal made investment in America a risky project," says economist Donald J. Boudreaux, author of The Triumph of Economic Freedom.
Deaths in ICE detention have hit a two-decade high, and allegations of medical neglect and poor conditions continue to surge.
Contrary to what some believe, the Clean Power Plan was not the first executive branch action stopped on the "Shadow Docket."
More of what's been absent from discussions of the recently released Supreme Court memoranda, with commentary by Davis and Re.
Republicans picked this fight, and Democrats responded by drawing some egregiously gerrymandered districts. In the end, voters lose.
Plus: The war with Iran is raising condom prices, increased legal liability for chatbot advice could backfire, and more...
Plus: Tit-for-tat gerrymandering, D.C.'s flowing fountains, more war in the Strait of Hormuz, and more...
Remember: It could happen at your firm, too.
Plus: a credible new report on the Alito retirement rumors.
The platform creators filed a lawsuit claiming their First Amendment rights were violated after the Trump administration convinced Apple and Facebook to remove their content.
The professional-ethics implications of making court confidences public.
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