Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) has had it with a feral Trump judge.
Law and Justice
The Supreme Court Lets Domestic Abusers Have Their Guns
Last June’s Court ruling is being used to strike down state laws keeping guns out of the hands of “credible threats” to women and children.
The Border Patrol’s Power Grab
The agency seeks more authority from the legislature to nab trespassers and others in Texas.
Mortgage Bankers Scrambling Over Conservative Court Ruling
Faced with the potential invalidation of CFPB’s funding structure, the top lobbyist for mortgage companies asks Congress to write the agency’s rules into law.
‘Hot Spot’ Cops Killed Tyre Nichols in Memphis. Hochul Wants More in New York.
The controversial units have been responsible for high-profile killings and civil rights abuses in cities nationwide. Gov. Hochul doubled their state grant funding in New York—and wants to double it again.
The Immigration Case Backlog Continues to Grow
As President Biden continues the policies of his predecessor on the border, the way out of the crisis lies in unclogging a system still bursting with cases.
Et Tu, Jared Polis?
Buses are not the answer to emergency migrant services and immigration policy reforms.
Will SCOTUS Revoke the Right to Strike?
A case argued this week could give worker-phobic Republican justices a chance to force workers to stay on the job.
Administration Releases Brief in Student Debt Case
The court brief highlights how ruling to abolish student debt would be counterproductive to even conservative judicial interests.
A Day of Constitutional Reckoning Approaches
Section 2 of the 14th Amendment was designed to strip congressional districts from states that disenfranchise voters. It’s never been implemented.

