From targeting foreign students to attacking transgender rights, Trump's recent executive actions aren't making America great - they're dismantling the principles that made it great to begin with.
Two professors wrote that although it has been argued Trump's order is at odds with language in the 14th Amendment, there could be more nuance to the issue.
A constitutional law professor weighs in on the legal battles sparked by President Donald Trump’s controversial executive ...
In a recent New York Times op ed, legal scholars Randy Barnett and Ilan Wurman offer a partial defense of President Trump's executive order denying ...
Juleena Pham raises a very good question in her letter ( “Presidential immunity is disturbing,” Our Readers Views, Feb. 5). She wants to know why a convicted felon can become president of the United ...
The president's executive orders have already drawn dozens of legal challenges, including some that could make it to the U.S.
After an intense debate, the Los Angeles City Council rejected a proposal on Friday, Feb. 14, intended to provide eviction ...
By DAVID BAUDER The White House barred a credentialed Associated Press reporter and photographer from boarding the ...
A judge in Missouri has set the stage for abortion providers in the Show-Me State to once again reopen their doors to ...
The 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868, after the Civil War, with the intention of granting full citizenship rights to freed African American slaves; its birthright citizenship clause has since been ...
Truthfulness in debate is the cornerstone of just legislation. Whether it is required by parliamentary procedure ...
Associated Press journalists have been blocked from places like the Oval Office and Air Force One because the organization ...