
The Debate Dividing the Supreme Court’s Liberal Justices
Outnumbered and facing vast stakes, Justices Kagan and Jackson are split over the best approach: investing in diplomacy inside the court or sounding the alarm outside.
By Jodi Kantor

Outnumbered and facing vast stakes, Justices Kagan and Jackson are split over the best approach: investing in diplomacy inside the court or sounding the alarm outside.
By Jodi Kantor

The second Trump administration has filed roughly the same number of applications so far as the Biden administration did over four years. But they have fared quite differently.
By Adam Liptak

In a studiously bland new book, “Listening to the Law,” the Supreme Court justice describes her legal philosophy and tries to sidestep the court’s recent controversies.
By Jennifer Szalai

In a new book, Justice Amy Coney Barrett asks for faith in the Supreme Court but reveals very little.
By Jodi Kantor

Memoirs by Margaret Atwood, Elizabeth Gilbert and Lionel Richie; history from Jill Lepore and David Nasaw; and plenty more.
By Miguel Salazar and Laura Thompson

Novels by Richard Osman and Patricia Lockwood, memoirs by Elizabeth Gilbert and Arundhati Roy, the continued adventures of Robert Langdon and more.

The court’s order was fractured, with the justices splitting over whether individual cancellations and the policy behind them could be challenged in a federal trial court.
By Adam Liptak

The three-judge panel has allowed the case to languish in a kind of legal limbo, catching the eye of some legal experts.
By Alan Feuer

At a bar association event in Indiana, the justice told those gathered that she is focused on drawing attention to what is happening to the government.
By Abbie VanSickle

In solo dissents this term, the justice accused the conservative majority of lawless bias. On the term’s last day, Justice Amy Coney Barrett fired back.
By Adam Liptak
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