With the Supreme Court approaching the start of summer, the justices will likely decide the court’s major remaining cases by late June.
On Monday, President Donald Trump’s personal attorney made a pointed argument in a media interview that a President can’t be charged with obstructing justice. On further review, that statement and the opinions of legal experts about it are under some close scrutiny.
A Sunday vote in Puerto Rico could result in the commonwealth using an obscure process to seek statehood status in Washington.
The decision to invoke the "nuclear option" completes a coup by Republicans in stealing a Supreme Court seat that rightfully belonged to Democrats.
Funding for Donald Trump’s Mexico border wall will be front and center in next month’s budget debate, but there could be a broader constitution barrier staying in the way of the project’s long-term completion.
There has been more media and academic discussion in the past few weeks about the feasibility of the U.S. government acquiring the land needed
U.S. District Judge Theodore D. Chuang's opinion said that the new executive order was “the realization of the long-envisioned Muslim ban.”
There is now a movement afoot by a group seeking a ballot referendum in California for that state to become its own sovereign nation.
With Bernie Sanders yet to concede the Democratic presidential nomination to Hillary Clinton, what are the historical precedents, in recent years, for a candidate with the second-most pledged delegates taking a nomination?
A vocal contingent in the District of Columbia is pushing forward with plans for a summer local constitutional convention, with the goal of creating the 51st state.
The Federal Communications Commission on Thursday took the first step in a net neutrality plan that could make it harder to access Netflix, Facebook and YouTube, or guarantee your access to those websites under certain circumstances.