Search for: "State v. Michael Gore" Results 1 - 20 of 155
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
2 Mar 2024, 3:06 am by jonathanturley
For example, Michael Waldman, president of New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice, noted that in 1974 the Court considered United States v. [read post]
3 Nov 2023, 3:01 pm by Daniel J. Gilman
It was a while ago, but no, neither Alan Turing nor Al Gore attended the workshop. [read post]
19 Oct 2023, 9:01 pm by Jon May
Gore, the Court may find that the procedure used by the states denied the voters the equal protection of the law and throw the case into the United States House of Representatives. [read post]
14 Aug 2023, 4:00 am by Eric Segall
Dedicated to Retired Judge Dick Posner Two of America's most prominent conservative constitutional law professors, both self-described originalists, Will Baude and Michael Paulsen, have penned a 126-page opus explaining why Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment disqualifies on its own terms with no enabling legislation Donald Trump and likely many others from holding office under the United States or any state. [read post]
13 Oct 2022, 8:55 am by Lawrence Solum
Gore repeated McPherson’s historical amnesia and provoked a doctrine that directly threatens such core democratic values as state court authority to interpret state constitutions and the power of the people to elect the President of the United States. [read post]
13 Sep 2022, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
  Julie Suk and Caroline Fredrickson are newer friends, with whom I worked (as with Mark, Steve, and Jennifer) on what I call the “Tomasky project,” a group that came together charged by Michael Tomasky, the editor of Democracy (and now, as well, The New Republic) to design a constitution that would serve us well in the 21stcentury. [read post]
7 Sep 2022, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
Good progressives that most of us are at Levinsonfest, we almost certainly agree that Al Gore and Hillary Clinton would have governed better than George W. [read post]
7 Sep 2022, 5:23 am by Eugene Volokh
New York State Liquor Authority[15] involved a New York law under which liquor distillers could not sell to wholesalers in New York except in accordance with a monthly price schedule that affirmed that prices in New York were no higher than the lowest prices charged in other states.[16] Healy v. [read post]