France's Messy Elections Make American Politics Look Orderly
The U.S. flirtation with populism barely holds a candle to the situation across the Atlantic.
The U.S. flirtation with populism barely holds a candle to the situation across the Atlantic.
Those three presidential candidates are making promises that would have bewildered and horrified the Founding Fathers.
Contrary to progressive criticism, curtailing bureaucratic power is not about protecting "the wealthy and powerful."
Don't blame criminal justice reform or a lack of social spending for D.C.'s crime spike. Blame government mismanagement.
The doctrine makes it nearly impossible for victims of prosecutorial misconduct to get recourse.
Even as he praises judicial decisions that made room for "dissenters" and protected "robust political debate," Tim Wu pushes sweeping rationales for censorship.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson says these cases will "devastate" the regulatory state. Good.
“Immigration is an area of the law where the partisan alignments break down over Chevron.”
The surveillance company mSpy just suffered its third data breach in a decade, exposing government officials snooping for both official and unofficial reasons.
Plus: A disappointing first round of "Baby YIMBY" grant awards, President Joe Biden endorses rent control, and House Republicans propose cutting housing spending.
Plus: Trump immunity ruling, cosmopolitan thinking on immigration, cringe Kamala, and more...
Plus: The editors reflect on the release of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
And a grand jury says that's illegal.
"This is an obvious attempt to use our public schools to convert kids to Christianity. We live in a democracy, not a theocracy," one ACLU attorney tells Reason.
By requiring "absolute" immunity for some "official acts" and "presumptive" immunity for others, the justices cast doubt on the viability of Donald Trump's election interference prosecution.
The Court is remanding these two cases for more analysis—but it made its views on some key issues clear.
Plus: Biden messaging turns dark, Iran's voter nihilism, Catholic socialists, and more...
It’s impossible to reconcile big-government dreams with the reality of the clowns who rule us.
The national debt has become an alarm bell ringing in the distance that people are pretending not to hear, especially in the city that caused the problem.
"Period during which America's national debt was about $75 million"
China's free speech record is bad, but the federal government's isn't so great either.
"The past is there to teach us what can happen," the Hardcore History podcaster tells Reason's Nick Gillespie.
Donald Trump had a point before his campaign walked it back.
Her concurrence is a reminder that the application of criminal law should not be infected by personal animus toward any given defendant.
The Supreme Court's recent rulings limiting the powers of the administrative state are a blessing for liberals who might not control the White House for much longer.
The decision also negates two counts of the federal indictment accusing Donald Trump of illegally interfering in the 2020 presidential election.
Abortion should have been an easy win for Biden, but his incoherent answer during Thursday's debate allowed Trump to come out on top.
Biden's performance at Thursday's debate made clear that he should have bowed out after a single term, but many politicians stick around long past their sell-by date.
Homeless advocates say the court's decision in Grants Pass v. Johnson gives local governments a blank check to "to arrest or fine those with no choice but to sleep outdoors."
The Court says Chevron deference allows bureaucrats to usurp a judicial function, creating "an eternal fog of uncertainty" about what the law allows or requires.
Costner stars, directs, and writes in what amounts to a three-hour prologue for a better movie.
War and peace are the most important decisions a country can make. No politician wants to level with Americans about it.
Plus: Newsom's fantasies, Scandinavia's ghettos, online betting markets, and more...
The best way to promote liberty is by reducing the government power, not by harnessing it on behalf of supposedly conservative or populist nostrums.
The Harm Reduction Gap argues for individual autonomy and meeting drug users where they're at.
Hosts Noah Kulwin and Brendan James explain how proxy war fighters can become America's enemies.