The American Bald Eagle Is Back - But Don't Credit the Endangered Species Act
Many things contributed to the rebound and recovery of the bald eagle, but the nation's foremost species conservation statute deserves little credit.
Many things contributed to the rebound and recovery of the bald eagle, but the nation's foremost species conservation statute deserves little credit.
We should heed Alexis de Tocqueville's warning: "A man's admiration for absolute government is proportionate to the contempt he feels for those around him."
The Court may have ruled on birthright citizenship, but the debate over birthright citizenship and the Fourteenth Amendment is likely to continue.
Some safety recommendations are treated as essential—while others become negotiable once influential people object.
Courts allow litigants to commandeer state and local governments under the Endangered Species Act.
If you want to devote an institute to "strengthening America's democratic institutions," you shouldn't name it for someone who degraded the public's trust in those institutions.
Plus: A 29-year-old DSAer wins, San Francisco's disappearing babies, and more...
Trump v. Slaughter is a big win; Trump v. Cook is embarrassing given the posture of the case as explained in the dissents.
The justice criticizes the Court’s endorsement of coercive plea bargaining and its embrace of dubious Fourth Amendment doctrines.
Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss Gavin Newsom's turn toward socialism.
Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss the Supreme Court’s rulings on birthright citizenship and transgender athletes.
The Supreme Court has "no shortage of tools" to enforce the separation of powers, Justice Neil Gorsuch notes. "The only real question is whether we will use them."
Understanding Trump v. Barbara.
The Supreme Court extended presidential control over federal agencies. What could go wrong?
If the laws requiring such agencies to be independent are unconstitutional, it may be that very existence of those agencies is also now illegal.
Tensions between today's two major presidential removal power decisions.
In a pair of decisions on Monday, the Supreme Court ruled that presidents have full authority to fire heads of executive branch agencies—but that the Fed is different.
Marjorie Taylor Greene discusses the future of the Republican Party, the resurgence of democratic socialism, and why the political establishment always wins
As expected, the Supreme Court overturns Humphrey's Executor, but reaffirms the independence of the Federal Reserve.
The division will be renamed the "Energy and Natural Resources Division."
My new law review article defends long-standing principles: The privilege is not only constitutionally required, but it also helps to protect abuse victims by bringing sexual abuse to light.
The Ninth Circuit allows a religious discrimination claim against Alaska Airlines to go forward, based on its firing of Christian flight attendants who objected on a company-run intranet to the company's statement in favor of a federal ban on sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination.
A new chapter in the never-ending battle between centralized power and local control.
War making in "the power of a single man" is not what the Founders intended.
Prosecutors in New Jersey must disclose how the technology is used in criminal cases, the state’s Supreme Court ruled.
Extensive evidence indicates that the decision to end Temporary Protected Status for Haitian migrants was motivated by unconstitutional racial and ethnic discrimination. The Court's ruling on statutory issues also has flaws.
A dispensary owner believes Hawaii’s hemp regulations are unconstitutional. He’s suing to stop their enforcement, but the law may not be on his side.
Understanding the 6–3 decision in Mullin v. Doe.
With the Birthright Citizenship case still undecided, the Trump Administration has prevailed in every other immigration case before the Court this term, and some are quite consequential.
Robby Soave and Jason Russell break down the socialist sweep in NYC, the latest in House of the Dragon, and the World Cup.
Democrats and Republicans alike dragged out the process to vote on the Iran war. Antiwar advocates say their vote still matters.
A democratic socialist who favors the eradication of Western civilization just won her primary.
Her plan to fix Social Security's fiscal flaws would ask workers to cover the full cost. Some Republicans are supporting it too.
Rapid transfers are cutting detainees off from their lawyers and families.
Anthropic and OpenAI may not like current federal controls on their products, but it will be consumers who end up getting screwed.
Is the D.C. Circuit willing to allow "conservative" panel decisions on hot-button issues to stand? And is en banc review more than a way to ensure further review at One First Street?
Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss the recent online feud between Rep. Ro Khanna and Elon Musk.
Understanding the stakes of Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections.
An unplanned encounter with a silly, arbitrary (and improving) liquor law
The conservative justice continues to wage a lonely legal crusade over the Commerce Clause.
Democrats may revive impeachment if they take Congress in November. Trump and his allies, meanwhile, want his two impeachments erased.
The court ruled the subpoenas were part of an unconstitutional effort to coerce Minnesota state and local governments into giving up their immigration "sanctuary" policies.
The DOJ's unilateral abandonment of the Anti-Weaponization Fund "makes it crystal clear that these parties were never adverse," the former judges argue.
Here are the sketchy tactics California’s public health agency is using to convince towns and cities to ban tobacco sales.
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