President Donald Trump’s dramatic pause of federal grants and loans is queuing up a Supreme Court showdown over the Constitution that will test the court’s recently muscular commitment to curb executive power.
As Trump's funding freeze heads to court, he hopes judges grant him the power of impoundment. What is impoundment? And why does it matter?
Donald Trump wants to stop a lawsuit against his Truth Social company by arguing that, while he's president, he should be immune from any civil suit filed in state court.
Liberal Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson says she's found an outlet for the frustration that can result from being in the minority on the nation’s highest court: boxing.
Illinois’ Gov. JB Pritzker can lead in an effort to develop state responses to counteract or disrupt Donald Trump.
During former President Joe Biden's administration, more than 5 million Americans saw their student debt forgiven.
Whatever the true scope of this funding suspicion, the upshot is clear: President Donald Trump wants ... It will take a Supreme Court decision to end Trump’s impoundment altogether, and that ...
When the Supreme Court justices first shared an inaugural stage with Donald Trump, they heard the new president deliver a 16-minute declaration against the country and vow, “This American carnage stops right here and stops right now.” Afterward ...
The president directed the attorney general to take “all appropriate action to seek the overruling” of high court precedents that limit executions.
President Trump’s critics were quick to declare his 75-day pause on TikTok’s shutdown illegal — but nearly two weeks later, nobody has sued to stop it.
This spring's race for a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court will speak to the political landscape in the nation's most competitive state.