With Abortion Rights On The Line, Planned Parenthood Announces 2020 Push The abortion-rights group says the goal of the $45 million campaign is to unseat President Trump as well as elect candidates at all levels who support abortion rights. Sarah McCammon
LGBTQ workers in Washington are protected, no matter what SCOTUS rules Queer Washingtonians have had job and housing protections since 2006 Paige Browning
Supreme Court Revisits Abortion With Louisiana Case At issue is a Louisiana law that mirrors a Texas law the court struck down. What's different, however, is that Justice Anthony Kennedy, who cast the decisive fifth vote in the 2016 case, has retired. Nina Totenberg
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Treated Again For Cancer The 86-year-old justice just wrapped up weeks of treatment after a new cancerous tumor was found on her pancreas. Doctors say there's no evidence of cancer elsewhere. Nina Totenberg
Does Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Have Any Regrets? Hardly "I do think that I was born under a very bright star," Ginsburg said recounting her career and legacy as a woman who beat the professional odds. Nina Totenberg
Retired Justice John Paul Stevens, A Maverick On The Bench, Dies At 99 Former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens has died at the age of 99. Appointed by President Gerald Ford, he was known for his "crafty and genial hand" and as a "judge's judge." Nina Totenberg
Clarence Thomas: From 'Black Panther Type' To Supreme Court's Conservative Beacon The longest-serving member of the current court is also its furthest to the right, least traditional and most controversial — and with a new conservative majority, he may be having a moment. Nina Totenberg
Cities And Immigrants Drove Census Controversy — 100 Years Ago A century ago, debate over immigration and urban-rural power stalled congressional action on the results of the census. The tensions that mattered then still persist a century later. Ron Elving
Judge To Review Claims Of Census Citizenship Question's 'Discriminatory' Origins While the Justice Department continues exploring possible ways to add a question about citizenship to the census forms, a federal judge in Maryland is moving ahead with reopening two cases against it. Bobby Allyn
To Gerrymander Or Not To Gerrymander? That's The Question For Democrats The Supreme Court essentially approved the practice in a recent ruling. Will Democrats still make good on promises to take partisanship out of redistricting? Miles Parks