Trump, Sonia Sotomayor and 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.
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
8hon MSN
The Supreme Court wants to know: Are Trump's tariffs too big for the president to decide alone?
A majority of Supreme Court justices on Wednesday expressed skepticism about President Donald Trump claiming so much power from a Carter-era law.
Throughout arguments Wednesday, the liberals sought to convince the conservative justices most amenable to those theories that the Republican president had significantly overstepped his authority based on both,
At least one conservative justice expressed concern that a win for President Donald Trump could create an opening for a future president to declare a
The legality of President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs was met with significant skepticism at the Supreme Court.
In a striking dissent, the Supreme Court’s Democratic appointees ask readers to imagine themselves suffocating.
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,