Search for: "United States v. Madison" Results 321 - 340 of 1,315
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30 Jun 2020, 9:28 am by Jonathan H. Adler
On one side of this dispute, we have the United States Postal Service—"an independent establishment of the executive branch of the Government of the United States. [read post]
29 Jun 2020, 9:00 pm by Jareb Gleckel
With a conservative majority on the Supreme Court, the question everybody has been asking is what the future of abortion will look like in the United States. [read post]
23 Jun 2020, 1:43 pm by Sandy Levinson
  But his skepticism about oaths certainly extends to quasi-religious oaths like those exacted from the President and, under Article VI, all public officials, whether state or national. [read post]
19 Jun 2020, 3:56 pm by David Kopel
As Barnett explains: Spooner supplemented this interpretive claim about original public meaning with a principle of construction he took from the 1805 Supreme Court case of United States v. [read post]
25 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
He says that Madison nowhere asserted that a single state had exit rights. [read post]
24 May 2020, 5:34 am by Nicholas Mosvick
It argued the tax was not an excise, it was not uniform throughout the United States, its exceptions were numerous and arbitrary in violation of the Fifth Amendment. [read post]
20 May 2020, 12:26 pm by Anthony Gaughan
Here is the abstract: One of the most controversial decisions in the modern history of the Supreme Court is Citizens United v. [read post]
19 May 2020, 6:15 pm by Sandy Levinson
One other quite obvious question:  Assume that one is completely confident that originalism requires independent electors, just as James Madison never ever said he was mistaken in 1791 in arguing that the Bank of the United States was unconstitutional. [read post]
14 May 2020, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
Gaughan, Drake University Law School, has posted James Madison, Citizens United, and the Constitutional Problem of Corruption which appears in the American University Law Review 69 (2020): 101:James Madison (LC)One of the most controversial decisions in the modern history of the Supreme Court is Citizens United v. [read post]
14 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
But Madison nowhere asserts that if the Constitution were approved based on the new theory of self-governance, a single state or even a few disgruntled states, can dissolve it.Indeed, Madison insists, in a letter dated January 1, 1833 to Alexander Rives, that “a rightful secession requires the consent of the others, or an abuse of the compact. [read post]
4 May 2020, 6:30 am by Sandy Levinson
  Whatever may have been his later views, the Madison of 1787 could easily join with Hamilton in a basic contempt for the actualities of state governance. [read post]
3 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
Madison, and the Missouri Crisis are told alongside less familiar ones like Martin v. [read post]
30 Apr 2020, 12:48 pm by Amy Howe
Live-streaming video of the proceedings in a country’s highest court may not be as widespread as it is in the state supreme courts here in the United States. [read post]
29 Apr 2020, 12:47 pm by Marcia Coyle
" The political question doctrine frequently has figured in cases involving the foreign policy interests of the United States and the Justices have not been reluctant to defer to the executive branch in those situations. [read post]