The 1913 Federal Reserve Act created the current Federal Reserve System and introduced a central bank to oversee U.S.
Discover how government budgetary decisions influence public services like education, healthcare, and infrastructure, ...
In February, the United Kingdom government appointed a working group to provide a definition of “anti-Muslim hatred/Islamophobia”, which should have completed its work by the end of August. In the ...
Voters in areas where elections are cancelled next year will not vote until the new shadow unitaries are formed, the government has confirmed. Local government minister Alison McGovern told the ...
The Albanese government has abandoned its former definition of an external workforce in the Australian public service, which it used to accuse the Coalition of spending $20.8 billion to outsource ...
Protests have erupted across northern India after the Supreme Court redefined the Aravalli hills - one of the world's oldest geological formations spanning the states of Rajasthan, Haryana, Gujarat, ...
The government is considering a draft definition of anti-Muslim hatred which does not include the term "Islamophobia". The BBC has seen the form of words from the ...
Following the California Coastal Commissions approval of extended operations at Diablo Canyon Power Plant, there is a local push to get unitary taxes reinstated. Unitary tax refers to the property tax ...
Supreme Court justices seemed open Monday to overruling a 90-year precedent that has prevented presidents from removing members of independent agencies at will in a case that could reshape the balance ...
Caleb E. Nelson, a leading originalist law professor, challenged the conventional wisdom of the “unitary executive theory” in an article that was debated in the parties’ briefs ahead of Monday’s ...
The Supreme Court will debate Monday whether to finally finish off a teetering, 90-year-old precedent that limited presidents’ power over many federal agencies. But lurking in the wings is a far more ...
Courtly Observations is a recurring series by Erwin Chemerinsky that focuses on what the Supreme Court’s decisions will mean for the law, for lawyers and lower courts, and for people’s lives. Please ...