Government Reopens After Record 43 Days
The longest shutdown in U.S. history ended late Wednesday, Nov. 12 when Pres. Donald Trump signed a spending package that reopens the government and funds most of it through January.
Read MoreThe longest shutdown in U.S. history ended late Wednesday, Nov. 12 when Pres. Donald Trump signed a spending package that reopens the government and funds most of it through January.
Read MoreThe Indiana Court of Appeals heard arguments Tuesday in a wrongful death case that could shape how far the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s responsibility extends to former college athletes who later develop degenerative brain disease.
Read MorePeople on both sides of a legal challenge to Pres. Donald Trump’s tariff authority warn that survival is on the line in the high-profile case pending before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Read MoreAttorney General Todd Rokita escalated two investigations into alleged discrimination at one of the nation’s top Catholic universities and at a second private Indiana college.
Read MoreLiz Brown has been called a lot of things. But liberal is a new one.
Read MoreThe U.S. Supreme Court has allowed former Pres. Donald Trump to remove three Democratic members of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, further escalating the administration’s efforts to assert greater control over independent federal agencies.
Read MoreAn Indiana law requiring adult websites to verify user ages can stay in place after the nation’s highest court affirmed a similar restriction in Texas.Â
Read MoreA U.S. Supreme Court deadlock that effectively halted the launch of a proposed religious charter school in Oklahoma after Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s recusal could stem from her past connections to the University of Notre Dame.
Read MoreBy Casey Smith Indiana Capital Chronicles A U.S. Supreme Court ruling from earlier this year will effectively remove federal protections for most of Indiana’s wetlands — and enable Hoosier lawmakers to repeal already-weakened state protections for those areas. The high court ruled in May that federal protections for … Read More
The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday, June 30, ruled that the Biden administration does not have the legal authority to enact a one-time student debt relief program, dealing a blow to the 40 million Americans who would have qualified.
Read MoreNursing home patients can sue providers that accept Medicaid in federal court, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Thursday in an Indiana-born case with implications for millions of Americans.
Read MoreThe U.S. Supreme Court turned away a request from a group of Indiana University students who claimed the university’s vaccine mandate was unconstitutional.
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