What will the end of affirmative action mean for prospective students of color navigating the application process at elite universities?
Law & Justice
The Mills of the Gods Catch Up With Trump
Today on TAP: New York taxes? Document possession? Finally, the mega-crime: attempting to seize power through fraud and force.
One More Reason Why the Court Needs a Code
Justice Sotomayor’s use of Court staff to help sell books wouldn’t be permitted under lower courts’ codes of conduct.
Why Gorsuch’s Opinion in ‘303 Creative’ Is So Dangerous
The Court could have framed the decision more narrowly. It didn’t.
The GOP’s Tommy Tuberville Problem
Today on TAP: The Alabama senator’s blockade of military promotions reveals the party’s real position on abortion.
Why Racial Remedy Still Matters
Focusing on class is good policy, but the long legacy of state-supported racism means we must find ways to keep taking race into account.
In Its Next Term, the Supreme Court Could Claim More Power for Itself
A case on its docket could enable justices to strip rulemaking authority from federal agencies and reassign it to themselves.
What We Can Learn From Falling Crime
The pandemic caused a lot of crime. But police reform can play a part in reducing it as well.
Trump Judge Effectively Names Himself President
Terry A. Doughty says he gets to decide who the FBI, DHS, HHS, and the Justice Department can talk to.
The Biden Administration Begins Student Debt Relief Plan B
The path they have taken includes a potential lengthy negotiated rulemaking process.

