Keyword: John-Roberts
John-Roberts
has 78.5% among keywords.
BS Score: 5.6%.
Articles analyzed: 1.
Words analyzed: 3,572.
Analyzed articles
The Federalist
- By Hans Mahncke
- 7/3/2026, 11:32 AM
Hasty Generalization 13.4% - Negativity Bias 12.9% - Appeal to Emotion 12.8%
There are Supreme Court decisions that faithfully interpret the Constitution, even when reasonable people disagree about the outcome. And then there are decisions in which the justices appear to begin with the outcome they want and only afterward search for constitutional language to justify it. The Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v.... more
Vox
- By Ian Millhiser
- 7/3/2026, 10:45 AM
Negativity Bias 36.1% - Biased Writer Voice 25.1% - Hasty Generalization 15.9%
The legal profession is much like a priesthood; both lawyers and theologians interpret a central text, be it the Bible, the Quran, the Gita, or the Constitution. We bury ourselves in canonical commentaries on that text. And we are all supplicants to beings much more powerful than ourselves. Which explains why I’ve spent the past few... more
Breitbart
- By Pam Key
- 7/2/2026, 3:15 PM
Negativity Bias 39.4% - Appeal to Emotion 29% - Pessimism Bias 24.1%
Thursday on Fox News Channel’s “America Reports,” host John Roberts said Democratic Socialists want to “crap all over America.” Roberts said, “On the occasion of America’s 250th birthday, a lot of us are feeling patriotism and love for this country. This was an adopted country for me. It wasn’t for you, but a lot of these Democrat... more
The Conversation
- By John E. Jones III
- 7/1/2026, 8:43 PM
Biased Writer Voice 34.4% - Negativity Bias 25.4% - Confirmation Bias 17.4%
In the Supreme Court term that began in October 2025, the justices delivered major decisions in cases ranging from voting rights to citizenship to presidential power. The Conversation’s Politics and Legal Affairs Editor, Naomi Schalit, spoke with Dickinson College President John Jones, a former federal judge, about the court’s session.... more
The Federalist
- By M.D. Kittle
- 7/1/2026, 11:43 AM
Negativity Bias 57.7% - Biased Writer Voice 50.4% - Unattributed Quote 36.9%
In his brilliant dissenting opinion eviscerating the majority’s legal gymnastics on birthplace citizenship, Justice Samuel Alito warned the court not to “adopt an erroneous interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment simply out of fear of the consequences of ‘rocking the boat’ or as a reaction to current immigration policy.” But fear and... more
Slate
- By Mark Joseph Stern
- 6/30/2026, 4:22 PM
Appeal to Emotion 38% - Biased Writer Voice 36.8% - Negativity Bias 33.9%
On Tuesday, the Supreme Court ruled that the first sentence of the 14th Amendment means exactly what it says: Birthright citizenship is the nation’s fundamental law, and Donald Trump cannot repeal it via executive order. The vote was 5–4. This outcome is, of course, a relief. But the margin is a scandal. It is nothing short of stunning... more
The Federalist
- By John C. Eastman
- 6/29/2026, 7:44 PM
Biased Writer Voice 38.8% - Negativity Bias 13.3% - Confirmation Bias 10.9%
Just minutes apart Monday morning, Chief Justice John Roberts handed down two of the most consequential separation-of-powers opinions of the Supreme Court’s October 2025 term. In one, he overruled one of the New Deal's foundational precedents and dramatically restored presidential control over the executive branch. In the other, he... more
Vox
- By Ian Millhiser
- 6/29/2026, 6:50 PM
Biased Writer Voice 46% - Negativity Bias 35.8% - Politically Left Leaning Bias 32.9%
Trump v. Slaughter, one of two “unitary executive” cases that the Supreme Court handed down on Monday, is the culmination of a nearly 40-year fight by Republican judges to expand the powers of the presidency. It transforms President Donald Trump into the most powerful figure to govern the United States in generations. The central issue... more
The Federalist
- By John, Andy Schlafly
- 6/26/2026, 11:14 AM
Negativity Bias 63.6% - Politically Right Leaning Bias 63% - Biased Writer Voice 44.9%
Far from being the bold MAGA court that Trump supporters campaigned so hard to attain, this court has retreated to near irrelevancy. The Supreme Court is 6-3 Republican-appointed, including three justices picked by President Trump. Yet as we reach the annual end of the Supreme Court term, which customarily wraps up before July, there are... more
Washington Monthly
- By Jack Rakove
- 6/10/2026, 9:00 AM
Biased Writer Voice 23.7% - Negativity Bias 9.7% - Framing Effect 9%
The six Republican-nominated Justices who dominate the Supreme Court have found an ingenious way to commemorate the 250th anniversary of American independence. Their April ruling in Louisiana v. Callais, and their June ruling in Allen v. Milligan, accepting the elimination of one of the two Alabama congressional seats where African... more