Michael Coren: America was founded on religious neutrality of its governance. For religious conservatives—even judges—it’s an increasingly difficult position.
Tag Archives: U.S. Supreme Court
How Christine Blasey Ford and Anita Hill walked the impossible knife’s edge
Shannon Proudfoot: ‘Separated by 27 years and a social landscape that has supposedly shifted on its moorings, two remarkable testimonies share inescapable parallels’
Brett Kavanaugh can’t squeeze in a word at his own confirmation hearing
Protestors wailed, senators cried foul, security hauled spectators from the chamber. An that was before the nominee opened his mouth
Why Canada’s Supreme Court appointments are nothing like America’s circus
Opinion: By and large, we’re lucky that the forces that produced America’s deeply partisan Supreme Court appointment process don’t really exist anywhere else
How a judge’s retirement may be putting U.S. abortion rights at risk
As one key U.S. Supreme Court justice retires this summer, the future of all manner of issues — and abortion rights in particular — have been called into question
An historic battle approaches over the U.S. Supreme Court
Replacing Antonin Scalia with even a middle-of-the-road moderate would alter the court
TMI? The U.S. Supreme Court joins the blogosphere
That judges are somehow splendidly isolated is one of the cardinal fictions of the American judiciary
Roberts Ruling redux: A closer look at the ‘Obamacare’ decision
Court gives Obama a big legal victory, and Republicans a rallying cry to get their voters to the polls.
Careful what you wish for, Prof. Mendes
Colby Cosh on how we might as well go ahead and hold the funeral if democracy is so easily buyable
A Lord resurrected
Some of Conrad Black’s harshest critics admit they were too quick to judge