This month the Supreme Court is due to announce its decision in the King v. Burwell case, which will determine whether federally-run health care exchanges may provide subsidies to individuals under the Affordable Care Act. Many Republicans hope the Court rules that such subsidies may not be provided under the text of the statute, while some Democrats, including President Obama, argue that the case should never have been heard. But is the public’s opinion of the Supreme Court shaped by such partisan messages? In new research, Tom Clark and John Kastellec find that the public’s opinion of the court is shaped by messages from their co-partisans: among members of the public, Democrats and Republicans are much more likely to support limitations ...
This paper explores how throughout American history, a divide in opinion has formed between the cla...
The purpose of this article is to examine the recent history of nominations to the Supreme Court wit...
The past year has seen major decisions by the Supreme Court on gay marriage and Obamacare. But what ...
The U.S. Supreme Court is isolated from the public, yet dependent on high levels of public support t...
The public perceives the Supreme Court to be a legal institution, less partisan than its counterpart...
This paper investigates whether Republicans or Democrats support a strong Supreme Court and why. Fur...
Despite the widespread perception that judges are not political beings and should rule in an imparti...
With competing assumptions and alternative empirical models, scholars have come to rather different ...
Recent decisions by the US Supreme Court such as the overturning of Roe. vs Wade have raised questio...
A fundamental challenge surrounding the role of the United States Supreme Court in American democrac...
Contemporary U.S. Supreme Court nominations are unavoidably and inevitably political. Although obser...
It has always been a matter of debate if Supreme Court rulings consolidate opposition to an issue or...
The recent partisan blocking of President Obama’s moderate Supreme Court appointment, Judge Merrick ...
This week, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of subsides which support federal health insurance excha...
This note argues that true judicial restraint is a fictional impossibility. Any practice of judicial...
This paper explores how throughout American history, a divide in opinion has formed between the cla...
The purpose of this article is to examine the recent history of nominations to the Supreme Court wit...
The past year has seen major decisions by the Supreme Court on gay marriage and Obamacare. But what ...
The U.S. Supreme Court is isolated from the public, yet dependent on high levels of public support t...
The public perceives the Supreme Court to be a legal institution, less partisan than its counterpart...
This paper investigates whether Republicans or Democrats support a strong Supreme Court and why. Fur...
Despite the widespread perception that judges are not political beings and should rule in an imparti...
With competing assumptions and alternative empirical models, scholars have come to rather different ...
Recent decisions by the US Supreme Court such as the overturning of Roe. vs Wade have raised questio...
A fundamental challenge surrounding the role of the United States Supreme Court in American democrac...
Contemporary U.S. Supreme Court nominations are unavoidably and inevitably political. Although obser...
It has always been a matter of debate if Supreme Court rulings consolidate opposition to an issue or...
The recent partisan blocking of President Obama’s moderate Supreme Court appointment, Judge Merrick ...
This week, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of subsides which support federal health insurance excha...
This note argues that true judicial restraint is a fictional impossibility. Any practice of judicial...
This paper explores how throughout American history, a divide in opinion has formed between the cla...
The purpose of this article is to examine the recent history of nominations to the Supreme Court wit...
The past year has seen major decisions by the Supreme Court on gay marriage and Obamacare. But what ...