The case rests on whether that decision is reviewable by the courts or not.
Law and Justice
Dreamers Protest as Supreme Court Hears DACA Case
Recipients of DACA and TPS brought their fight to the steps of the courthouse.
Should the Supreme Court Be Reformed?
Five possibilities for strengthening the Court and rebuilding public trust
Great News: The Supreme Court Might Attack the CFPB
It sounds bad, but it would likely enable a Democratic president to get rid of an unqualified, anti-regulatory Consumer Financial Protection director immediately.
All the President’s Whistleblowers
The history of government whistleblowing in the U.S. is fraught with charges of espionage, inadequate protections, and real hardships for those who speak out.
An Obscure Supreme Court Case Has Big Implications for Undocumented Immigrants
The Court heard a case about whether to allow states to set immigration policies. Here’s what it was like inside the courtroom.
The New War on Naturalized Citizens
The Trump administration is seeking to denaturalize and deport longtime U.S. citizens, seizing on tiny mistakes in the process and putting the status of every naturalized citizen at potential risk.
Federal Judges Have Stopped Trump’s Scheme to Block Millions of Legal Immigrants
The ‘public charge’ rule won’t take effect today. But its origins show the Trump administration’s true intent.
Supreme Court Considers Civil Rights Statutes as Tool to Protect LGBT Workers Against Job Discrimination
When it comes to LGBT workplace rights, the justices will rule on whether the landmark 1964 statute means what it says and says what it means.
Sex Discrimination Against Gays Goes Before the Supreme Court on Tuesday
In the case Bostock v. Clayton County, the Roberts Court must choose between social-conservative ideology and its adherence to textualism.


