Trump didn't place his hand on the Bible during his swearing-in, and some of his supporters are blaming John Roberts.
While the Constitution does not specify who must administer oaths, Chief Justice John Roberts is expected to swear in Donald ...
Joe Biden's presidency officially ended when President Donald Trump was sworn into office by U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice ...
The Supreme Court decided, by a scant 5–4 margin, that President Donald Trump would have to (virtually) sit through a ...
When the Supreme Court justices first shared an inaugural stage with Donald Trump, they heard the new president deliver a ...
The Supreme Court is under great stress, if not in crisis. So says Chief Justice John Roberts in his annual report. In important respects, Roberts is surely correct. The public’s trust in the ...
The Supreme Court seemed likely to uphold a new law that could force TikTok to shut down in the U.S., with conservative and ...
"Allowing the sentencing to proceed reaffirms the principle that the legal process must apply equally to all citizens," said ...
Chief Justice John Roberts asked TikTok's attorney ... The art-of-the-deal president-elect had urged the Supreme Court to pause the ban to give him time to "negotiate a resolution." ...
Chief Justice John Roberts will swear in Donald Trump for his second term on January 20, 2025, highlighting tradition and ...
President-elect Donald Trump's recent defeat at the Supreme Court tells us important things about the high court.
The Roberts court used a novel doctrine to blunt or undo many of Biden’s policy initiatives. But the president-elect was left ...