The Supreme Court decision allowing normal legal process to proceed in the Trump administration's foreign aid case is an important reminder that we have three equal branches of government.
Amid a nationwide surge of protesters taking to Tesla dealerships to voice their disdain for billionaire owner Elon Musk’s ...
REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo By Blake Brittain and John Kruzel WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court is set on ...
Even as the court rejected Trump’s freeze on USAID, it effectively gave him another chance to delay sending life-saving money ...
The case examines whether the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has the authority to grant a license to Interim Storage Partners, ...
The case focuses on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s approval of a project to store spent nuclear fuel at a remote site in ...
Good afternoon and happy Wednesday, readers! The Supreme Court heard arguments over a dispute on storing nuclear waste in Texas. In today’s Daily on Energy, we break down what the case entails and the ...
A nuclear power renaissance—driven in part by power-hungry AI data centers—has revived a thorny problem: what to do with the ...
The US Supreme Court’s dive Wednesday into the seemingly straightforward question of who can challenge an agency decision on ...
The groups that sued insist the court’s ruling ought to force the Trump administration to restore all funding delivered via U ...
"Yucca Mountain was supposed to be the permanent solution," said Justice Neil Gorsuch during the Supreme Court hearing Wednesday.
The key to understanding this morning’s Supreme Court ruling unfreezing American foreign aid is that two different rulings ...
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