Lyle Denniston

Mar 24 2024

Are tribal rights facing new peril?

For two centuries, America’s Native American tribes have had a legal right to rely upon the federal government for broad support, though they have often had to accept with that the insult of being thought of as savages.  The great Chief Justice John Marshall, who first gave the tribes significant legal protection in the 1820s… Read More

Mar 17 2024

When government speaks…

The Constitution’s guarantee of free speech is for the people; government does not share that First Amendment right.  But government, to operate, must speak.  On Monday, the Supreme Court tries, in two hearings, to clarify the sometimes-hazy line between official speech that seeks to inform or persuade, and official compulsion or censorship of others’ speech…. Read More

Mar 7 2024

Will Mar-a-Lago case be ended?

The federal judge overseeing the criminal case accusing former President Donald Trump of taking and refusing to return highly sensitive classified documents is giving serious thought to ending the case altogether, she indicated on Wednesday. U.S. District Judge Aileen M. Cannon of Fort Pierce, Fla., issued a brief order saying that two legal briefs broadly… Read More

Mar 4 2024

Constitutional — and political — victory for Trump

Settling a constitutional dispute for the entire nation, and doing so in sweeping terms, a bare majority of the Supreme Court on Monday handed to Congress the sole power to control when and how a candidate for federal office may be barred from the ballot under a 156-year-old constitutional clause. It is a power that… Read More

Mar 4 2024

Trump ruling coming today?

The Supreme Court, in a surprise notice Sunday, said it will issue one or more decisions this morning.  That means there is a good chance (but not a guarantee) that it will decide the case challenging Donald Trump’s constitutional qualifications to run for the Presidency this year. The Court customarily announces in advance when it… Read More

Mar 3 2024

Trump v. United States: Explained

When the Supreme Court takes up, at a hearing in late April, former President Donald Trump’s sweeping claim that he is immune to criminal charges, what will be at stake? As lawyers on all sides of this historic controversy start preparing their legal briefs, they cannot be entirely sure of the Court’s intentions in Trump v…. Read More

Feb 28 2024

Major delay of Trump prosecution

The Supreme Court, giving itself powerful control over the timing of federal criminal trials of former President Donald Trump, agreed on Wednesday to rule on his claim that he has total legal immunity to prosecution. The Court did put its review on a faster-than-usual schedule, but the timetable of reaching a final decision may as… Read More

Feb 27 2024

The Court and mass shootings

Mass shootings in America, continuing now nearly every day, most often involve a gunman with a grisly intent to kill as many people as rapidly as possible.  Congress is aware of that, but it has not yet found a way around the gun control lobby’s fervent protection of rapid-firing, high-volume weaponry.  On Wednesday, though, the… Read More

Feb 25 2024

Can social media be controlled?

In 1887, an English Catholic historian and politician – Lord Acton — was waging a futile challenge to the idea that the Pope is infallible.  He complained of the Pope’s authority in a letter to an Anglican bishop, writing: “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”  The Lord is best remembered for those… Read More

Feb 20 2024

The Supreme Court is doing WHAT?!!

Sometimes, law seems to make no sense.  Why, for example, would the Supreme Court – busy these days with huge constitutional controversy — take an hour or so to listen to the legal gripe of a truck stop that sells gas and snacks beside the highway in Watford City, North Dakota (population 5,293)? The seeming… Read More

Lyle Denniston continues to write about the U.S. Supreme Court, although he “retired” at the end of 2019 following more than six decades on that news beat. He was there for three revolutions – civil rights, women’s rights, and gay rights – and the start of a fourth, on transgender rights. His career of following the law began at the Otoe County Courthouse in his hometown, Nebraska City, Nebraska, in the fall of 1948. His online, eight-week, college-level course – “The Supreme Court and American Politics” – is available from the University of Baltimore Law School, and it is free.

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