Sonia Sotomayor, Trump and Justice Amy Coney Barrett
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At a Boston University lecture, Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor encouraged students to maintain faith in the courts and resist political complacency.
During oral arguments on Wednesday in a case that will determine the future of President Donald Trump's economic agenda.
The Supreme Court‘s Wednesday oral arguments over the legality of Donald Trump‘s sweeping “Liberation Day” tariffs pitted the president’s constitutional foreign affairs powers against Congress’s constitutionally delegated tariff power.
In a striking dissent, the Supreme Court’s Democratic appointees ask readers to imagine themselves suffocating.
Sonia Sotomayor had been a federal appeals court judge for about four months when Ellen Chapnick got a phone call in 1998. The Columbia Law School lecturer's students had
Justice Sonia Sotomayor made clear that she doesn’t think much of the government’s argument that the tariffs aren’t a form of taxation—a power that the Constitution gives to Congress. “It’s a tax,” Sotomayor responds,