Roberts Memo Could Complicate Trump’s Spending Freeze
As a constitutional crisis seems headed to the Supreme Court, documents show the chief justice declared that a president has no authority to block required spending.
As a constitutional crisis seems headed to the Supreme Court, documents show the chief justice declared that a president has no authority to block required spending.
In a pivotal 12 months, the master planners transformed the judiciary, positioning it to deliver corruption-legalizing precedents.
John Roberts and Samuel Alito own shares of companies that could score billions in tax relief from the outcome of Moore v. United States.
During this live event, the Lever team and paid subscribers discussed the troubling legacy of SCOTUS Chief Justice John Roberts.
The Supreme Court’s chief justice was once eager to strip away power from a liberal judiciary. Now, he’s guarding the high court’s power.
The Chief Justice questioned Congress’ ethics rules a decade ago; now he’s punted the Clarence Thomas corruption review to a secret committee.
The Chief Justice’s rulings legalizing corruption built the foundation of this era’s extremist laws and court precedents.
While Roberts was being praised as a hero, his court’s recent ruling just helped Wall Street giants stomp on thousands of public-sector workers and retirees in one of America’s poorest states.
When Roberts was nominated in '05, few focused on his business fealty, but he was appointed because he represented corporate clients aiming to transform the court — which is exactly what he's doing.