While centered on South Carolina, the Supreme Court’s decision could have national implications for how lawmakers draw congressional boundaries.
Author: John Fritze, USA TODAY
Checking in? Supreme Court wades into fight between Democrats, Trump over divisive hotel
The Supreme Court agreed to settle a years old dispute between Trump and Democrats over a hotel the former president’s company developed.
Texas in charge? Did the Supreme Court give red, blue states more power over national policy?
Some experts say a Supreme Court decision upholding a California animal-welfare law may give states more power to impose their will on other states.
Texas in charge? Did the Supreme Court give red, blue states more power over national policy?
Some experts say a Supreme Court decision upholding a California animal-welfare law may give states more power to impose their will on other states.
Federal judge blocks Biden from ‘paroling’ migrants hours before Title 42 set to lift
Biden acknowledged this week that it would be “chaotic” at the border as the U.S. lifts a pandemic-era policy that made it harder to seek asylum.
How a group of herring fishermen may get the Supreme Court to reel in government power
While the case is focused on the fishing industry, it’s a major catch for conservatives who want to limit the power of the “administrative state.”
Justice Samuel Alito claims stunning leak of opinion overturning Roe came from draft’s critics
Samuel Alito told the Wall Street Journal he has a “pretty good idea” who was responsible for the leak of the major abortion opinion last year.
A 94-year-old grandmother lost her home. Should the government have profited from her setback?
The Supreme Court appeared to side Wednesday with a 94-year-old grandmother who received no payout when the county sold her home for back taxes.
Can officials block critics on Twitter? Supreme Court weighs if that violates First Amendment.
The Supreme Court will revisit an issue that last came up when people sued former President Donald Trump for blocking critics on Twitter.
Abortion pill will remain widely available but advocates look ahead to future fights
During last year’s fight over Roe, some hoped the Supreme Court could send the abortion issue to the states to resolve. It hasn’t worked out that way.