Three pending lawsuits challenge President Trump’s practice of accepting payments and other benefits from foreign governments through his businesses as violative of the Foreign Emoluments Clause. They also allege that the President’s practice of accepting payments and benefits from state or federal governmental units violates the Domestic Emoluments Clause. These actions raise interesting questions about the meaning of two little-discussed provisions of the Constitution. But before reaching the merits the courts where these cases are pending will first have to grapple with issues of justiciability - in particular, with the question whether plaintiffs have “standing” to bring their claims in federal court. This article explains why, under th...
Recent litigation brought or threatened against the administration of President Obama has brought to...
The D.C. Circuit’s divided decision in Maloney v. Murphy granting standing to minority party members...
When the Framers of our national Constitution included the Foreign Emoluments Clause, they did so as...
Three pending lawsuits challenge President Trump\u27s practice of accepting payments and other benef...
You, too, can sue Donald Trump under the Emoluments Clause! Since Inauguration Day, several lawsuits...
Emoluments is the word of the hour again in the United States. The past week saw the filing of two n...
President Trump was sued in New York District Court for allegedly violating the Foreign Emoluments C...
Dan Blair discusses the ongoing case of District of Columbia v. Trump, including the court’s definit...
The text of the Emoluments Clause provides no explicit enforcement mechanism, raising questions abou...
In 2017, three sets of plaintiffs in three different federal district courts brought civil actions a...
Because of the foreign business dealings of President Donald Trump and his family, interpreting the ...
President Trump has become immersed in civil litigation since announcing his candidacy for the Unite...
If a federal official is deliberately violating the Constitution, is it possible no federal court ha...
When does a state have standing to challenge the Executive Branch’s alleged underenforcement of fede...
Unless the plaintiff has a personal stake in the outcome, Article III of the United States Constitut...
Recent litigation brought or threatened against the administration of President Obama has brought to...
The D.C. Circuit’s divided decision in Maloney v. Murphy granting standing to minority party members...
When the Framers of our national Constitution included the Foreign Emoluments Clause, they did so as...
Three pending lawsuits challenge President Trump\u27s practice of accepting payments and other benef...
You, too, can sue Donald Trump under the Emoluments Clause! Since Inauguration Day, several lawsuits...
Emoluments is the word of the hour again in the United States. The past week saw the filing of two n...
President Trump was sued in New York District Court for allegedly violating the Foreign Emoluments C...
Dan Blair discusses the ongoing case of District of Columbia v. Trump, including the court’s definit...
The text of the Emoluments Clause provides no explicit enforcement mechanism, raising questions abou...
In 2017, three sets of plaintiffs in three different federal district courts brought civil actions a...
Because of the foreign business dealings of President Donald Trump and his family, interpreting the ...
President Trump has become immersed in civil litigation since announcing his candidacy for the Unite...
If a federal official is deliberately violating the Constitution, is it possible no federal court ha...
When does a state have standing to challenge the Executive Branch’s alleged underenforcement of fede...
Unless the plaintiff has a personal stake in the outcome, Article III of the United States Constitut...
Recent litigation brought or threatened against the administration of President Obama has brought to...
The D.C. Circuit’s divided decision in Maloney v. Murphy granting standing to minority party members...
When the Framers of our national Constitution included the Foreign Emoluments Clause, they did so as...