Supreme Court, Trump and tariff
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The class-action lawsuit claims DeWine should belated pay $300-per-week federal COVID jobless benefits to 320,000 eligible Ohioans.
The Supreme Court’s conservative majority has several avenues at its disposal as it appears poised to limit a central provision of the Voting Rights Act. As the justices consider Louisiana’s
President Donald Trump has won a string of cases on the Supreme Court's emergency docket this year, but many of these temporary victories will face full merit reviews.
A couple of weird stories from the legal world caught my eye this week. They are too good not to share. The first item comes from Minnesota. A judge in Anoka County named John Peter Dehen retired from the bench on October 10, following an order from the Minnesota Supreme Court suspending him on several counts of misconduct.
President Trump urged a New York appeals court late Monday to overturn his hush money criminal conviction, insisting the judge should’ve recused and excluded evidence Trump asserts is
State Supreme Court Justices Christine Donohue, Kevin Dougherty and David Wecht, all Democrats, are on the election ballot. Voters will be asked a simple yes or no on whether each justice should be retained. Justices serve 10-year terms, although Donohue must retire in 2027 when she reaches the mandated retirement age of 75.
Supreme Court arguments are set to begin on Tuesday in the case Chiles v. Salazar, potentially having implications for states that have sought to prohibit the practice. The conservative tilt of the Supreme Court has alarmed some LGBTQ+ advocates who believe the ban is at risk.
The legal question that has hit courtrooms around West Virginia is now proceeding on two tracks to the state's highest appeals court.
The Supreme Court seeks details on pending cyber crime investigations across states, aiming for a CBI-led probe into "digital arrest" scams targeting seniors. | Latest News India