Legal News

Reports on lawmaking, constitutional issues, and court cases. The Daily Signal combines news reporting with conservative commentary and legal analysis.
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  • news

    Supreme Court Hears Oral Arguments in Key Redistricting Case

    THE CENTER SQUARE—The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a critical case regarding Louisiana’s redrawn congressional districts on Monday. The state is defending the existing map and plaintiffs seek an overturn on grounds of racial gerrymander. The case could be pivotal as justices could examine the criteria required of state legislatures under the Voting…
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  • opinion

    Trump Racking Up Important Legal Victories as Left’s Lawfare Ramps Up

    The Left couldn’t defeat President Donald Trump at the ballot box. Now, their only hope seems to be defeating him at the courthouse. More than 130 cases have been filed against the Trump administration since Trump’s return to office just two months ago. With the help of activist federal judges, the Left’s large-scale lawfare operation…
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  • news

    Supreme Court to Decide if States Can Withhold Medicaid Funding From Planned Parenthood

    The Supreme Court could soon strike a blow to America’s largest abortion provider. Amid growing concerns about the quality of care at Planned Parenthood facilities and the fact that taxpayer funding is going to facilities that provide abortions, the Supreme Court could effectively decide whether states can withhold taxpayer dollars from the organization in an…
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  • news

    DOJ Reviewing Lawfare Case of Colorado Election Clerk Tina Peters

    The Department of Justice announced in a March 3 court filing that it will conduct a “review” of Colorado’s prosecution of Tina Peters, the former Mesa County election clerk convicted in connection with her efforts to prove election software had been tampered with in the 2020 election.  Colorado Attorney General Philip Weiser is none too…
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  • news

    Counselor Fights to Advise Minors Against Gender Transition in Supreme Court Case

    When Erin Brewer was 6 years old, she and her older brother were accosted by two grown men. She was raped. Her brother was not.   Brewer called herself a boy for the next several years because, she said, she felt vulnerable as a girl. She wore her brother’s hand-me-downs, used the boys bathroom at…
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  • opinion

    3 Reasons Elon Musk and George Soros Are Fighting It Out in Wisconsin’s Supreme Court Race

    The Wisconsin Supreme Court race on April 1 may be technically nonpartisan, but it is already shaping up to be a battle between two billionaires with incompatible political worldviews: Elon Musk and George Soros. The race appears on track to become the most expensive judicial election in U.S. history. Democrats have spent almost $18 million…
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  • news

    Justice Alito Slams Majority for Failing to Rein in ‘Judicial Hubris’ Against Trump Admin

    DAILY CALLER NEWS FOUNDATION—Justice Samuel Alito wrote Wednesday that he is “stunned” by the majority’s failure to call out a lower court’s “judicial hubris” in the case considering the Trump administration’s foreign aid spending freeze. In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court declined to block U.S. District Judge Amir Ali’s order requiring the government to…
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  • opinion

    Pennsylvania Supreme Court and GOP Cannot Be Complacent

    HARRISBURG, Pa.—Central Pennsylvania state Sen. Greg Rothman, the newly elected state Republican Party chairman, will face his first big challenge this year with the control of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court on the ballot. Rothman, who won the party chairmanship with overwhelming support in a 248-120 vote last month, will look to fill three state Supreme…
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  • news

    Supreme Court Sides With One of the Nation’s Most Liberal Cities in Challenge to EPA’s Authority

    DAILY CALLER NEWS FOUNDATION—The Supreme Court sided with San Francisco on Tuesday in its challenge to the Environmental Protection Agency. A majority on the court held that the EPA exceeded its authority by issuing San Francisco a permit that did not clearly explain the limits on how much sewage it could discharge into the ocean but included…
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  • news

    The First ‘Mini-Me’ Executive Branch Case Gets to the Supreme Court on an Emergency Appeal

    The first case involving judicial interference in the president’s executive authority has reached the Supreme Court in an emergency appeal filed over President Donald Trump’s firing of Hampton Dellinger, the Biden-appointed head of the Office of Special Counsel. In what acting Solicitor General Sarah Harris rightly calls an “unprecedented assault on the separation of powers”…
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  • opinion

    Key Judicial Body Does Sheldon Whitehouse’s Dirty Work With Proposed Changes to Amicus Disclosure Rules

    Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., has declared war on the judicial branch. Among his many complaints, he has insinuated without proof that judicial opinions he disagrees with are influenced by amicus—“friend of court”—briefs entangled in webs of dark money. To combat this supposed problem, he has pushed for onerous disclosure requirements that would essentially reveal everyone…
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  • news

    Leavitt Slams ‘Judicial Activists’ for Injunctions Against Trump

    While legacy media claim there is a “constitutional crisis” in the Trump administration, the real crisis comes from federal judges blocking President Donald Trump’s executive orders, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Wednesday. “The real constitutional crisis is taking place within our judicial branch,” Leavitt said at a press briefing, “where district court judges…
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  • news

    Tennessee’s Legal Warrior: Jonathan Skrmetti’s Biggest Case Awaits Supreme Court Verdict

    Jonathan Skrmetti is on a winning streak. Tennessee’s attorney general is hoping it continues all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.  Skrmetti announced Thursday his latest win, a $7.4 billion settlement with members of the Sackler family and Purdue Pharma for fueling the opioid epidemic. Tennessee was among the 15 states that accused the…
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  • opinion

    Supreme Court Rebuffs Free Speech Defense in Upholding TikTok Divestment

    At least one branch of the federal government is not prepared to make way for TikTok.  On Friday, a mere seven days after oral arguments in TikTok v. Garland, the Supreme Court in a per curiam opinion unanimously upheld the constitutionality of the divestment law against challenges that it violated the First Amendment.  The court…
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  • news

    ‘It Stole My Childhood’: Supreme Court Urged to Protect Kids From Online Porn

    Taylor Muthoka was first exposed to pornography at the age of 7. A friend showed it to her online, and all the children had to do to access the website was check a box saying they were 18. Little did she know that moment would lead to a 10-year addiction. “That one moment of exposure…
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  • opinion

    TikTok Tries to Head Off Divestment Law at the Supreme Court

    TikTok and a coterie of its users came before the Supreme Court on Friday to mount their last-resort First-Amendment challenge to the law that will force ByteDance, TikTok’s Chinese parent company, to sell the platform or cease its U.S. operations in less than two weeks on Jan. 19. For 2 1/2 hours, lawyers led the…
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  • opinion

    Supreme Court Could Send Message on Climate Change Lawsuits

    The U.S. Supreme Court will soon decide whether to hear cases with major impacts for the separation of powers and for left-leaning states’ and municipalities’ ability to use their state courts as pawns to establish national climate change policy. To preserve federalism, the stability of the rule of law, and separation of powers in our Republic,…
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  • opinion

    Chief Justice Identifies Threats to Judicial Independence—And Maybe Tips His Hand in TikTok Case?

    In a new report, Chief Justice John Roberts details several critical concerns that he feels threaten the ability of our judicial system to carry out justice impartially and according to the rule of law. At the end of each year—only hours before a new year begins—Roberts releases his “Year-End Report on the Federal Judiciary.” Think…
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  • opinion

    Supreme Court Justice’s Broadway Debut Puts Spotlight on Left’s Double Standard

    Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson joined the Broadway cast of “& Juliet” in New York City this past Saturday. On the surface, Jackson is having fun and fulfilling what she said was a dream of hers, but the implications of such a stint are much more reprehensible than meets the eye. “& Juliet” is…
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  • opinion

    How Government Unions Won in Wisconsin by Stacking Judicial Deck

    Remember when impassioned protesters stormed a Capitol building and disrupted the democratic process? No, not the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. I’m talking about the pro-union one that stormed the Wisconsin state Capitol on Feb. 21, 2011. More than a decade ago, hundreds of protesters charged into and occupied the state…
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