"Limits On Spending Power Seen As Health Ruling's Legacy": Bloomberg News has
this report.
"US judge temporarily blocks Miss. abortion law": The Associated Press has
this report.
Update: Monday's edition of The New York Times will contain an article headlined "Mississippi Law Aimed at Abortion Clinic Is Blocked."
"Is the Health Care Law's 'Mandate' Really a Tax?" Seventh Circuit Judge
Richard A. Posner has
this post today at "The Becker-Posner Blog."
"An Abbey's Run-In With Law On Who Can Sell Caskets": This evening's broadcast of NPR's "
All Things Considered" contained
this audio segment.
"The Court's Top Blogger: Howard Kurtz talks to SCOTUSblog founder Tom Goldstein about his blog's big week." This video segment appeared on today's broadcast of CNN's "Reliable Sources."
"Roberts switched views to uphold health care law": Jan Crawford of CBS News has
this very interesting report.
"Source: Roberts Switched Sides." National Review Online's "The Corner" blog has
a post that begins, "On
Face the Nation this morning, CBS legal correspondent and Supreme Court watcher Jan Crawford seems to have confirmed the theory that Chief Justice John Roberts originally voted to strike down the individual mandate before switching his vote, and that a sustained effort was made by the dissenters to win him back, to no avail."
Related tweets from CBS News senior producer Caroline Horn can be accessed here and here.
Update: "NewsBusters" has a post titled "CBS News: Roberts Was Going to Overturn ObamaCare But Changed His Mind" that provides access to the pertinent video and transcript from today's broadcast of the CBS News program "Face the Nation."
"Welcome to the Roberts Court: How the Chief Justice Used Obamacare to Reveal His True Identity." Law professor
Jeffrey Rosen has
this blog post online at The New Republic.
"Supreme Court Review: The Tyranny of the Majority." Andrew Cohen has
this essay online at The Atlantic.
"Five Years After the Cheshire Home Invasion, A Killer Answers Questions": Alaine Griffin has
this article today in The Hartford Courant.
"High-court ruling could help municipalities like Altoona": William Kibler has
this lengthy front page article, in which I am mentioned, in today's edition of The Altoona Mirror.