Search for: "ANTHONY T. WILLIAMS" Results 181 - 200 of 1,105
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13 Sep 2019, 3:00 am by Jim Sedor
National/Federal At the Bedraggled FEC, a Clean Slate of Leaders? [read post]
3 Sep 2019, 9:33 am by Amy Howe
When Stephens began work at Harris Funeral Homes in October 2007, she dressed and appeared as a man and went by the name of Anthony. [read post]
19 Aug 2019, 9:01 pm by Austin Sarat
Austin Sarat is Associate Provost, Associate Dean of the Faculty and William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College. [read post]
29 Jul 2019, 6:00 am by Quinta Jurecic
Schiff made this argument following Mueller’s testimony, reasoning that Trump “has committed offenses against the law that would certainly qualify as impeachable offenses … The Constitution makes clear, though, that Congress isn’t compelled to do an impeachment even when we know there are impeachable offenses. [read post]
1 Jul 2019, 9:01 pm by Vikram David Amar
This is true, and it highlights an underappreciated aspect of the non-delegation theory: the concern underlying the non-delegation instinct is not that power ought never to be delegated, but that power ought never be delegated in a way it can’t be retrieved by the delegator. [read post]
26 Jun 2019, 9:01 pm by Vikram David Amar
While the Nineteenth doesn’t affirmatively guarantee a right to vote, it does textually ensure that voting eligibility criteria—in both federal and state elections—shall not include sex. [read post]
10 Jun 2019, 6:30 am by Andrew Koppelman
  Here’s a detail Kersch doesn’t mention: in 1957, William F. [read post]
7 Jun 2019, 3:00 am by Jim Sedor
Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were on the front lines of the movement, there were other women working behind the scenes to fund it. [read post]
28 May 2019, 1:54 pm by David Oscar Markus
  I didn't realize that after the acquittal, two of Hastings' colleagues (William Terrell Hodges and Anthony Alaimo) secretly referred him for investigation by the 11th Circuit, which ended up getting him impeached. [read post]
10 May 2019, 9:24 am by Jonathan Spontarelli
Companies like Uber, Lyft, General Motors and Google’s sibling Waymo have hired a phalanx of current and former Washington officials, including Obama administration Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx, several highway regulators, and two former chairs of the National Transportation Safety Board, the federal agency that investigates deadly crashes. [read post]
10 May 2019, 3:01 am by Jim Sedor
Companies like Uber, Lyft, General Motors and Google’s sibling Waymo have hired a phalanx of current and former Washington officials, including Obama administration Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx, several highway regulators, and two former chairs of the National Transportation Safety Board, the federal agency that investigates deadly crashes. [read post]
11 Apr 2019, 7:05 am by Ronald Collins
Most people might think that doesn’t quite fit with my jurisprudence in other areas… People need to know that we’re not doing politics. [read post]
12 Mar 2019, 8:40 am by Adam Feldman
In recent terms justices have ranged from 97 percent frequency in the majority (Justice Anthony Kennedy in October Term 2016) to 61 percent in the majority (Thomas in October Term 2014). [read post]
11 Mar 2019, 10:00 pm by DONALD SCARINCI
Justice Scalia wrote: [T]he claims of stare decisis are at their weakest in that field, where our mistakes cannot be corrected by Congress. [read post]
8 Mar 2019, 10:46 am by David Greene
Contrary to Justice Thomas’ remarks in 2019 that “[t]he states are perfectly capable of striking an acceptable balance between encouraging robust public discourse and providing a meaningful remedy for reputational harm,” the Supreme Court in 1964 did not trust Alabama to do so, or to apply other seemingly neutral laws in an acceptable way. [read post]
26 Feb 2019, 8:13 am by Kevin Kaufman
For example, in a recent survey asking why people don’t have an Individual Retirement Account (IRA), 28 percent of respondents said that they didn’t think they knew enough about IRAs, and 17 percent said they thought IRAs were too confusing. [read post]