Search for: "John Branch" Results 1281 - 1300 of 5,202
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
10 Jan 2020, 11:56 am by Jonathan Shaub
But Republican legislators openly advocated for the impeachment of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Commissioner John Koskinen in 2016 because of the IRS’s responses to their subpoenas. [read post]
10 Jan 2020, 11:56 am by Jonathan Shaub
Perhaps the most famous line written by the Supreme Court is John Marshall’s statement that it is “emphatically the province and the duty of the judicial department to say what the law is”—and without any guidance from the courts, the executive branch has developed more and more aggressive formulations of its authority. [read post]
8 Jan 2020, 7:23 pm by Melanie Fontes
  Referring to the Chase impeachment, Chief Justice John Roberts told C-SPAN several years ago: I think the most important thing for the public to understand is that we are not a political branch of the government. [read post]
8 Jan 2020, 7:23 am by Adam Feldman
Chief Justice John Roberts released an impassioned Year End Report on December 31, 2019, which generated much commentary. [read post]
6 Jan 2020, 12:44 pm by Erin McCarthy Holliday
” The post Former Trump advisor John Bolton prepared to testify in Senate impeachment trial appeared first on JURIST - News - Legal News & Commentary. [read post]
6 Jan 2020, 3:01 am by Walter Olson
branch of government [Ilya Shapiro and James Knight on Cato amicus brief in Seila Law v. [read post]
2 Jan 2020, 5:32 am by Robert Brammer
What is the most interesting fact you’ve learned about the legislative process and/or the legislative branch? [read post]
2 Jan 2020, 4:01 am by Edith Roberts
On Tuesday, Chief Justice John Roberts released his annual year-end report on the federal judiciary. [read post]
30 Dec 2019, 6:00 am by Matthew Waxman
On this day in 1842, President John Tyler announced to Congress that the United States would henceforth protect the Hawaiian (or Sandwich) islands from European control. [read post]
26 Dec 2019, 9:05 pm by Alana Bevan
Senator Mitt Romney (R-Utah) stated that he supported the measure because he was “seriously concerned” about overreach on the part of the executive branch. [read post]
18 Dec 2019, 5:22 pm by NCC Staff
As the defendant in this case is the President, the Chief Justice of the United States, John Roberts, will preside over the trial. [read post]
18 Dec 2019, 3:05 am by SHG
If there is a question as to what process the Constitution requires, there is a third, co-equal branch of government with its own building to decide so. [read post]
16 Dec 2019, 9:05 pm by Jon D. Michaels
The first flank, which I will call the constitutional conservatives, is reshaping not only academic debates but also American jurisprudence, as evidenced by recent murmurings by Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Clarence Thomas, and then-Judge Neil Gorsuch. [read post]
16 Dec 2019, 11:16 am by Gordon Ahl, William Ford
Reynolds, John Hudak, William A. [read post]
11 Dec 2019, 9:23 am by Brian Greer
In fact, it got to the point where the CIA’s counterterrorism briefers were sometimes sharing too much information with the SSCI, often telling the committee about internal executive branch policy deliberations well before issues had been decided. [read post]
10 Dec 2019, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
Delaware Governor John Carney’s brief in support of Supreme Court review and the briefs of supporting amici argue that judges are policy makers, so the exception applies here.The Third Circuit rejected that argument. [read post]
10 Dec 2019, 3:48 pm by John Duffy
” All of this in a patent case that, as Chief Justice John Roberts recognized, may be “small potatoes” even within the narrow realm of patent law. [read post]
The president’s instruction that current and former officials across the executive branch should not cooperate with the ongoing impeachment inquiry is a discrete and comprehensible offense. [read post]
9 Dec 2019, 6:31 pm by Susan Hennessey
The McGahn episode does not implicate plausible constitutional defenses; articles related to the president dangling pardons to prevent witness cooperation or firing executive branch officials might implicate Article II, directing subordinates to lie in internal records does not. [read post]