News

On July 19, 1848, three hundred men and women gathered in Seneca Falls, New York for a convention that began a movement.
A family in Cleburne County is protesting a surveillance camera placed across the street from their house by the City of ...
Tabled amendment to Planning and Infrastructure Bill would require Natural England to eradicate all invasive non-native ...
As most of us learned at school, the U.S. Constitution requires a supermajority of three-fourths of the states to ratify any ...
Something amazing happened in Chico 120 years ago this month. On July 10, 1905, Annie Bidwell deeded 1,903 acres of her land to the City of Chico to be used as a public park. Mrs. Bidwell said she ...
Vague phrasing in the state’s Revolutionary-era Constitution enfranchised women who met specific property requirements. A ...
In upholding a Texas law requiring age verification to access porn websites, the court overturned a precedent that stood for more than two decades.
A federal judge in New Hampshire has blocked President Donald Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship.
As the U.S. Supreme Court weighs Trump’s executive order to restrict birthright citizenship, learn what the 14th Amendment says and where the legal battle stands today.
The U.S. Supreme Court handed President Trump a win by lifting blocks on his efforts to end birthright citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
The ruling clears a major hurdle to President Trump’s agenda and could reshape American citizenship, at least temporarily, as lower court challenges proceed.
The last six cases of the Supreme Court’s term include birthright citizenship injunctions and a parental bid to keep kids from LGBTQ-themed instruction in public school.