Samuel Alito, Supreme Court and Clarence Thomas
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A friend of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito revealed what he expects of his clerks.
New book reveals controversy over a flag at Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito's home prompted him to step away from authoring opinion in Jan. 6 case.
If a Supreme Court justice retires before the November midterms, this is how Trump and Senate Republicans can successfully confirm a successor.
Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito was taken to a hospital after becoming ill last month at a Federalist Society dinner in Philadelphia, according to people with knowledge of the March 20 incident.
Well, fear not, because SCOTUSblog's Kelsey Dallas crunched the numbers last year and determined the answer: Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito "agreed in 97% of all cases resolved with opinions from the court and in 100% of the closely divided (6-3 or 5-4) ones in the 2024-25 term.
Justice Samuel Alito was hospitalized on March 20 “[o]ut of an abundance of caution” and at the recommendation of his security detail, the Supreme Court’s Public Information Officer, Patricia McCabe,
The president is probably worried about his legacy and the possibility that the GOP will lose the Senate, making confirmations tough.
Samuel Alito is having a moment. Alito, the taciturn conservative justice who turned 76 this month, has always been admired by conservatives yet overshadowed in star power by fellow conservative Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas.
MS NOW's Mike Brzezinski discusses a report from The Hill which suggests the resignation of Supreme Court Justice Alito might motivate Republican voters ahead of the November midterms: "Senate Republicans Hope Supreme Court 'Surprise' Could Help Save Majority" MIKA BRZEZINSKI,