The real estate group says the federal government doesn’t have the power to freeze evictions.
Author: John Fritze, USA TODAY
Supreme Court: Five things to watch in final weeks of high court’s term
From a major health care case to the potential retirement of Justice Breyer, there’s a lot to watch in the final month of the Supreme Court’s term.
‘Huge numbers’ of abortion cases heading to Supreme Court to test limits of Roe v. Wade
Buoyed by a conservative Supreme Court, anti-abortion groups see a wave of pending appeals as the best chance in a generation to test Roe v. Wade.
Biden judicial nominee is poised for confirmation. Here’s why that may matter for the Supreme Court
Senate Republicans are taking a cautious approach to President Biden’s judicial nominees, even though one of them may be bound for the Supreme Court.
Exclusive: Biden names new federal judges, including a Bush nominee, with an emphasis on diversity
Biden is filling federal judgeships with an eye toward racial and professional diversity. The White House is now unveiling its next round of nominees.
Supreme Court to debate whether nonprofits must reveal donors despite threat of violence
Some fear the Supreme Court case could apply a new standard with sweeping implications for the disclosure of campaign donors and dark money groups.
Supreme Court leaves major conservative cases waiting in the wings, from abortion to guns
Rather than handing conservatives a string of wins, the Supreme Court has left advocates on the right grasping for answers about high-profile cases.
Supreme Court halts California coronavirus rules that limit home worship
This is the latest case in which the high court has barred officials from enforcing coronavirus-related restrictions applying to religious gatherings.
‘Nothing subtle about a bullet’: Supreme Court says police ‘seizure’ includes shots fired at fleeing suspect
The Supreme Court ruling expands Fourth Amendment protections as the nation wrestles with police use of force and split-second decisions by officers.
Supreme Court agrees to hear death penalty case against Boston marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
After a lower court threw out the death sentence, the government appealed, seeking to have it reinstated.