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There remains a long line of unfortunate and flawed Supreme Court precedents regarding the broad scope of the powers granted to Congress under both the Commerce Clause and the Necessary and Proper Clause.
This issue covers what Americans think of the state, local, and federal government response to Hurricane Katrina; Judge John Roberts; immigration issues; and tax reform.
To filibuster or not to filibuster? That is the question that Senate Democrats may have to ask themselves about the nomination of Judge Samuel Alito.
Rather than await the decision on the Affordable Care Act, President Obama decided to attack preemptively with error-filled claims about the place of judicial review in our constitutional system. Judicial review springs from the duty of a court, when deciding a case before it, to enforce the Constitution over a conflicting act of Congress.
Senate Democrats have destroyed the confirmation process; Republicans should try the Democrats' tactics to return the Supreme Court to the original meaning and purpose of the Constitution.
The Citizens United decision equates corporations with individual citizens, overturning the ban on corporate spending in federal campaigns, and will have huge effects on the policymaking process.
In overwhelming numbers, Americans today understand the point Judge Roberts tried to make: that race should not be a factor in drawing congressional districts.
Republication senators have found a new friend during judicial confirmations: the American Bar Association.





