Congress may investigate Trump's tainted Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, for lying under oath.
The Supreme Court slapped down the administration's demands for one of the president's cruelest policies.
The 6-3 denial is a big victory for health care rights — for now.
Conway obviously agrees with Roberts more than Trump when it comes to Tigar and the 9th Circuit.
His outburst came in response to Roberts' defense of the independent judiciary to the Associated Press.
“I knew a lady -- a schoolteacher -- who died after a back-alley abortion,” she told me.
It was a partial win for the Trump administration.
The New York Times reports that Trump's Chief of Staff and one of his informal advisers nearly got into a physical fight in the West Wing.
Surprising as this derailment of justice might have seemed, it echoed (and may, in fact, have reflected) another long-unspooling twenty-first-century American degradation of justice.
A new ABC News/Washington Post poll found Friday that a majority of Americans are unhappy with Justice Brett Kavanaugh's appointment to the Supreme Court.
Brett Kavanaugh ascended to the high court but may never rise above his Senate tantrum, skewered so memorably on Saturday Night Live.
He added that this was "consistent with the standard process for such investigations going back quite a long way."
What if the real business of judging is interpreting words in the Constitution and federal statutes?
No matter how many cases Justice Kavanaugh hears, people will think of a very particular incident whenever they hear his name.
Most Americans pine for normal leadership. That's what Democrats must offer.