President Trump, Neil Gorsuch and wife Marie Louise and Justice Anthony Kennedy.
AP/Alex Brandon
With Justice Anthony Kennedy’s retirement, President Trump will appoint a second justice to the Supreme Court. Will his nominees be impartial if Trump ends up in the court because of the Russia probe?
Arbitration trials don’t always result in equal justice.
Reuters/Gary Cameron
The court narrowly ruled that employees who sign arbitration agreements can’t bring class action suits over unpaid wages.
Trump with Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy.
EPA/Jim Lo Scalzo
Donald Trump is far from the first president to politicise the judiciary, but the way he’s going about it is uniquely dangerous.
Neil Gorsuch signs the constitutional oath after Chief Justice Roberts administered it in a private ceremony on April 10.
Franz Jantzen/Public Information Office Supreme Court of the U.S. via AP
With Neil Gorsuch’s appointment to the high court, conservatives regain their 5-4 majority, which will likely benefit employers over workers.
GOP Senate Judiciary Committee members after voting in favor of sending Gorsuch to the full Senate for confirmation.
Photo/J. Scott Applewhite
GOP members of the Senate Judiciary Committee have pushed Gorsuch’s nomination onto the full Senate. Both the Republicans and Democrats are getting ready for a fight.
Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch.
Joshua Roberts
Judge Gorsuch was raised Catholic and later became an Episcopalian. An expert on Church-State issues says don’t read too much into religion as an indicator of judicial philosophy.
EPA/AFP/Brendan Smialowski
Revenge is sweet – but if the Democrats indulge in it, they could dramatically weaken a whole branch of the US government.
Pro-life and anti-abortion activists converge in front of the Supreme Court on Jan. 27, 2017.
AP Photo/Andrew Harnik
What will happen to the landmark abortion rights ruling with Neil Gorsuch on the Supreme Court?
Trump shakes hands with Gorsuch on Jan. 31, 2017.
AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster
As conservatives cheer and liberals fret, a law professor considers Gorsuch’s judicial record and the politics behind his selection.
The U.S. Supreme Court.
ThatMattWade/flickr
Historical data suggest that a contentious candidate can delay a president’s progress on other initiatives.
Here goes.
EPA/Michael Reynolds
Neil Gorsuch’s views seem to put him to the right of many, if not most, Americans.