Supreme Court's looming decisions will sharpen law on powers of presidency, bureaucracy


by The Washington Times

The Washington Times— The Supreme Court’s decisions this term will advance federal law on the powers of the presidency and the administrative state, and give the high court a chance to clarify major rulings in recent years on abortion and the Second Amendment.

Zócalo Public Square—Will the Supreme Court Give the President More Immunity Than a Roman Emperor?. I have been studying and writing about Roman emperors for more than 30 years. I never imagined I would live in a time and place where the judicial system might give more extensive legal immunity to an American president than any Roman emperor ever enjoyed. Until last Thursday. Contemporary imagination often assumes that Roman emperors enjoyed absolute authority to do what they wanted with their empire’s resources, wealth, and military power. They did not. Rather, Roman emperors were magistrates...

Washington Examiner—Louisiana ruling shows folly of Supreme Court’s redistricting decisions. In its reasonable decision to throw out Louisiana’s congressional redistricting plan on Wednesday, a federal judicial panel implicitly highlighted, yet again, the confusing mess both Congress and the Supreme Court have made of redistricting law. The result remains a mess, but at least it gets rid of districts that are patently absurd. The back story […]

FOURSTATESHOMEPAGE—Former Galena City Prosecutor’s law license indefinitely suspended by Kansas Supreme Court. KSNF/KODE — The Kansas Supreme Court suspends former Galena City Prosecutor, Kevin Cure, indefinitely. Cure was suspended in 2018 for 18 months after his fourth drunk driving conviction. He admittedly appeared in court while drunk and missed hearings because he was in jail. Just one month after he got his license back in 2021, a []