As long as nobody will stop him, why wouldn’t he?
judicial review
How Congress Gets Its Groove Back
The Supreme Court’s recent rulings will change how Congress writes laws. It may even force the legislative branch to take a hard look at its own dysfunctions.
Pleasant Surprises From the Roberts Court
This session’s rulings on voting rights have broken with recent trends.
Why Supreme Court Protests Matter
Public outrage at the extreme decisions and corruption may have gotten John Roberts to uphold Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
Congress Can Defeat Judicial Overreach
On today’s X-Date: Joe Manchin’s Pipeline Payoff gets immunized from judicial review, as does what could have been a deregulation ratchet.
What Democrats Can Learn From Reporting on Supreme Court Corruption
The justices are sensitive to political pressure. Senate Democrats can impose that pressure through investigation.
Democrats Struggle to Face the Illegitimate Court System
A few Democratic members of Congress understand what needs to be done. More should join them.
What to Do About the Court
A Prospect symposium on judicial review and the separation of powers
In Defense of Judicial Review
For all its imperfections, the Court is the one branch of government structured to protect minority rights.
The Problem Isn’t Judicial Review; It’s the Court’s Politics
Which we can alter only with politics

