Before we can really get into the holiday spirit, we have to deal with the lump of coal the Supreme Court heard on December 7th: Moore v. Harper. The case is about a fringe legal theory that says that when it comes to regulating elections, state legislatures can do anything they want-- even violate the state constitution-- and state courts can’t intervene to stop them. It's bad, scary, foreboding, toxic, etc. Leah, Kate, and Melissa recap the arguments-- and then take a refreshing walk in a winter wonderland with this year's list of Our Favorite Things! If you're still doing your holiday shopping, we've got lots of recs.
The Pick-Me Boys and Girls of the Federal Judiciary
Asked and Answered: A Listener Mailbag Episode!
SCOTUS Seems to Normalize Authoritarianism
Will SCOTUS Let January 6 Defendants Off the Hook?
SCOTUS’s Final Sitting of the Term Is A Doozy
Florida Becomes a Battleground for Reproductive Rights
The Absurd Fiction of the Mifepristone Case
The Supreme Court Abortion Pill Case
Texas, Immigration, and Easily Avoidable Chaos
Welcome to Conservative Grievance Week
The TLDR of Trump's Indictments
SCOTUS Restores Trump to the Colorado Ballot, Unanimously (Kind Of)
Content Moderation, Machine Guns, and Trump's Trial Calendar
The Alabama Supreme Court Embraces Fetal Personhood
The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly From State Courts
SCOTUS Has Their Own Theories About Trump’s Eligibility
Why Did Trump Get Denied Immunity?
Does the Constitution Disqualify Trump from Presidency?
E. Jean Carroll and Robbie Kaplan on Trump's "Defamation Rampage"
Who Has Final Authority At The Border?
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