With SCOTUS set to rule this term on high-profile cases, a Boston case has attracted less attention but could have important ramifications for religious liberty
A recent SCOTUS decision allowing the firing of religious health workers in Maine brought national attention to the increasing friction between vaccine mandates & religious freedom.
"They want to be able to pass every piece of socialistic, agenda-driven legislation they can dream up to transform this country into a godless, secular society"
Sen. Ted Cruz (Texas) and five other Senate Republicans have introduced a constitutional amendment to prevent Democrats from packing the Supreme Court if Joe Biden wins the White...
This ruling may also impact nearly 2,000 other criminal convictions of Native Americans prosecuted by state in what has now been held to be tribal territory
After the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Texas Governor Greg Abbott’s ban on abortion during the COVID-19 pandemic, Planned Parenthood has refused to back down....
Chuck Schumer to Supreme Court Justices Gorsuch & Kavanaugh: “you have released the whirlwind & you will pay the price. You won’t know what hit you, if you go forward with these awful decisions.”
More than 200 members of the Senate and House of Representatives - all but two of them Republicans - want the Supreme Court to revisit Roe v Wade, the landmark 1973 decision which made abortion legal in the United States.
The high court's new term starts with cases that could hit religious believers hard. A trio of them concerns the controversial subject of LGBTQ rights. And one of those three involves a funeral home and a fired transgender worker. It could have broader implications for existing civil rights law and invasion of privacy.