Search for: "Bush v. Bush" Results 641 - 660 of 6,846
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6 Nov 2020, 5:07 am by Scott Bomboy
In 2020, that deadline is December 8, since the college votes on December 14, 2020 Elections contested in court (until December 14) While in most cases any dispute at a state level must be resolved by December 8, back in 2000 a divided Supreme Court, in a 5-4 vote, ruled on December 12 in Bush v. [read post]
5 Nov 2020, 6:17 am by Patrick S. O'Donnell
Qualifications to vote in House and Senate elections are decided by each state, and the Supreme Court affirmed in Bush v. [read post]
4 Nov 2020, 4:33 pm by snahmod
I posted the following very highly critical comments on Bush v. [read post]
4 Nov 2020, 3:51 pm by Sabrina I. Pacifici
These cases center chiefly on constitutional challenges to the status of mail-in ballots that arrive after Tuesday, including some fringe legal theories derived from 2000’s infamous Bush v. [read post]
4 Nov 2020, 6:15 am by James Romoser
Here’s a round-up of other Supreme Court-related news and commentary from around the web: What If This Election Ends in Another Bush v. [read post]
3 Nov 2020, 4:00 pm
The Court will not want a repeat of the calamitous decision in Bush v. [read post]
1 Nov 2020, 9:01 pm by Neil H. Buchanan
Bush advisor Karl Rove popularized, which is that it is best to attack one’s opponent’s greatest strength, not his weaknesses. [read post]
29 Oct 2020, 9:02 pm by Neil H. Buchanan
In a case arising out of Wisconsin earlier this week, much attention was paid to a concurring opinion by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who invoked Bush v. [read post]
29 Oct 2020, 9:00 pm by Austin Sarat and Daniel B. Edelman
But the Court itself issued no ruling.More than a century later, the Court entered the fray in Bush v. [read post]
29 Oct 2020, 12:28 pm by Marcia Coyle
” The court’s legitimacy has been challenged to varying degrees at other times in our history: the so-called Lochner era (when the court blocked social regulations of working conditions), the early New Deal (when the court thwarted President Roosevelt’s attempts to address the Depression), the Warren era (when the court’s liberal majority expanded civil rights and civil liberties), and the Bush v. [read post]