Members of the Senate Appropriations Committee approved a proposed constitutional amendment last week that will remand to Missourians a 2020 approval of a ballot initiative that permanently expanded Medicaid
Although 68 people filed for election to the U.S. House in the August primary by Tuesday’s deadline last week, the Missouri legislature has yet to approve the district lines for those eight seats.
The Missouri Supreme Court ruled in favor of allowing a California cannabis company that failed to acquire a license to access competitors' applications that were approved by the state Department of Health and Senior Services
St. Louis and Jackson counties are seeking to overturn a court order issued by a Cole County judge in November that renders null and void health regulations that were used to impose COVID-19 restrictions
Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt is threatening health departments and school districts with legal action if they continue to enforce mask mandates.
The Missouri Supreme Court is set to decide whether a new law bolstering the rights of sexual assault victims violates an accused defender’s constitutional rights.
A Cole County judge ruled in favor of ordering Missouri to collect union dues from corrections officers, clearing the way for workers to sue the state.
The Missouri Supreme Court heard arguments this week in a case that will determine whether the Conservation Commission will remain independent or be dominated by the General Assembly.
A coalition of doctors and professors of epidemiology have filed an amicus brief in support of a challenge lodged by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the League of Women Voters against the state’s requirement that absentee ballots be notarized.
The Missouri Supreme Court is reviewing a Western District Court of Appeals decision to uphold a Cole County judge’s ruling that a Jefferson City teacher was wrongfully terminated when she transferred school data to a private account.
Missouri’s Second Amendment Preservation Act (SAPA) has secured another victory after the U.S. Department of Justice attempted to sway a Cole County judge with a statement of interest.
Gov. Mike Parson was misguided in his efforts to incentivize Missourians to return to work by refusing to accept federal unemployment benefits that would have partly provided for the jobless, according to an attorney who sued the state.