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Nathan Lewin

Nathan Lewin

Nathan Lewin is a Washington D.C. attorney who has argued 28 cases in the U.S. Supreme Court and served on the adjunct faculties of leading national law schools.

The enactment of civil-rights election laws and the issuance of many Supreme Court opinions in recent decades have driven into obscurity my 1967 personal experience with this issue.
A case in Ohio presents a constitutional question that is fundamental to religious freedom.
Claims of false allegations about Biden-family crimes recently resulted in an indictment and guilty plea by Alexander Smirnov, but no comparable charge has ever been made against Luft.
The inexplicably respected publications are actively promoting antisemitism.
David Schizer’s introductory statement at a House hearing was appalling, deserving a failing grade in his school’s constitutional law course.
Some 20 years ago, I had a direct legal encounter with Arthur Engoron in a freedom-of-religion case.
Students should be given the legal right to sue individual officials who refuse to deal with the problem.
Shockingly, the presidents of Harvard, Penn and MIT do not know that the First Amendment does not protect antisemitic hate speech or support for terrorism.
American courts must stop stonewalling and hold pro-terrorist “charities” accountable.
A tale of two policies: The religious rights denied to Jews by Yale in 1998 have now been granted to Muslims in 2023.
The court is primarily responsible for the criticism that now calls for a legislative remedy.
Voluntary supplementary secular public education within or near the Chassidic yeshivahs is preferable to interminable litigation.