Lyle Denniston

May 23 2023

Biden resists court help on debt limit

President Biden and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen notified a federal judge in Boston Monday that, at least for now, they will resist an attempt to get the courts to provide a temporary way out of the looming economic catastrophe if the nation hits the government’s debt limit. A federal employee labor union recently asked U.S…. Read More

May 19 2023

Is great art truly original?

“Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery…”  Who wrote that?  A Google search tells us that it was Oscar Wilde.  But can we be sure?  Isn’t all creative expression – music, art, poetry, literature – borrowed or copied from someone else? That, strangely, is a fundamental cultural question that the Supreme Court tried to answer… Read More

May 16 2023

A lawsuit to end the nation’s debt crisis?

If President Biden and the Republican House do not find a way in the next few weeks to avoid a global economic collapse over the national government’s debt, the courts might have a solution. In a new lawsuit filed last week in federal court in Boston, a group of private lawyers have put forth a… Read More

May 11 2023

Justices’ hard choice on voting rights

A series of new filings today in a historic Supreme Court case on voting rights put a hard question before the Justices: how eager are they to settle now, before the 2024 elections, a core constitutional issue about federal elections? Lawyers on all sides of the North Carolina congressional elections case, Moore v. Harper, on Thursday… Read More

May 5 2023

New test for big voting rights case

The most important voting rights case now before the Supreme Court may be newly at risk of ending without a decision.  A recent decision by the North Carolina Supreme Court has raised the prospect that there may be nothing left for the Justices to decide. On Thursday, the Court told lawyers on all sides of… Read More

May 1 2023

Government power faces severe new test

Just one year after the Supreme Court’s conservative majority rolled out a new constitutional way to narrow the power of federal government agencies, the Court voted on Monday to consider endorsing another. At issue in a new case that will be reviewed in the Court’s new term starting in October is whether the Justices will… Read More

Apr 29 2023

Big win for GOP gerrymander

North Carolina’s state Supreme Court, with two new Justices making the difference, ruled on Friday that courts in the state have no power to strike down partisan “gerrymanders” – the two-centuries-old practice of giving one political party an advantage in elections. While a major setback for Democrats in the state, the ruling has national significance… Read More

Apr 25 2023

Final Court hearing tomorrow

The Supreme Court on Wednesday closes its regular schedule of hearings for its current term with a single case.  The hearing in a consumer rights case involves government power to take private property as a method of collecting back taxes. The Court will broadcast “live” the audio (no video) of the hearing on its homepage,… Read More

Apr 24 2023

Return of the “Charming Betsy”

A single hearing in the Supreme Court on Tuesday arises out of a long line of prior rulings, back as far as 1804 and the case of a schooner named the Charming Betsy and her famous role in the young United States’ efforts to stay neutral in a European war, between France and Britain.  Those… Read More

Apr 23 2023

Final week of Court hearings opens

On Monday, the Supreme Court begins its final week of planned hearings in the current term.  The first hearing will examine the right to appeal in a case about prison inmates’ rights. A second hearing is a test of the independent legal status of Indian tribes. The Court will broadcast “live” the audio (no video)… 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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