Several of the Supreme Court’s most controversial constitutional doctrines hinge on claims about electoral accountability. Restrictions on the President’s power to remove agency heads are disfavored because they reduce the President’s accountability for agency actions. Congress cannot delegate certain decisions to agencies because then Congress is less accountable for those choices. State governments cannot be federally commandeered because such conscription lessens their accountability. And campaign spending must be unregulated so that more information reaches voters and helps them to reward or punish incumbents for their performances. There is just one problem with these claims. They are wrong—at least for the most part. To illustrate the...
Constitutional theory features a persistent controversy over the source or sources of constitutional...
A popular myth in American constitutional law is that the strict scrutiny standard of review appli...
It is commonly understood that as a matter of federal law, states\u27 substantive policies may diver...
This Article examines the paradoxical world of Article V—the amending power of the Constitution—in l...
Part II presents a brief history of federal sentencing reform, including the rise of judicial and ac...
Conventional wisdom is that outside the Eighth Amendment, the Supreme Court does not engage in the s...
There are powerful historical, constitutional, empirical, and policy justifications for a return to ...
This Article—part of the Seattle University Law Review’s symposium on the centennial of the ratifica...
A major focus in judicial politics research has been to measure the extent to which the U.S Supreme ...
The plurality and dissenting opinions in McCutcheon v. FEC seem unreal. These opinions, which consid...
This Article argues that the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) is not unconstitutional - at least not y...
In most courts, a statement in an opinion is a holding only if it was necessary for the outcome of t...
“Constitutional privileging” occurs when courts treat the constitutional status of a legal claim as ...
There seem to be no limits on what can pass through state constitutional amendment procedures. State...
American law has yet to reach a satisfying conclusion about public access to information on governme...
Constitutional theory features a persistent controversy over the source or sources of constitutional...
A popular myth in American constitutional law is that the strict scrutiny standard of review appli...
It is commonly understood that as a matter of federal law, states\u27 substantive policies may diver...
This Article examines the paradoxical world of Article V—the amending power of the Constitution—in l...
Part II presents a brief history of federal sentencing reform, including the rise of judicial and ac...
Conventional wisdom is that outside the Eighth Amendment, the Supreme Court does not engage in the s...
There are powerful historical, constitutional, empirical, and policy justifications for a return to ...
This Article—part of the Seattle University Law Review’s symposium on the centennial of the ratifica...
A major focus in judicial politics research has been to measure the extent to which the U.S Supreme ...
The plurality and dissenting opinions in McCutcheon v. FEC seem unreal. These opinions, which consid...
This Article argues that the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) is not unconstitutional - at least not y...
In most courts, a statement in an opinion is a holding only if it was necessary for the outcome of t...
“Constitutional privileging” occurs when courts treat the constitutional status of a legal claim as ...
There seem to be no limits on what can pass through state constitutional amendment procedures. State...
American law has yet to reach a satisfying conclusion about public access to information on governme...
Constitutional theory features a persistent controversy over the source or sources of constitutional...
A popular myth in American constitutional law is that the strict scrutiny standard of review appli...
It is commonly understood that as a matter of federal law, states\u27 substantive policies may diver...