John Fetterman: 'I'm a Very Pro-Capitalist Democrat'
Sen. John Fetterman discusses the state of the Democratic Party, immigration, foreign policy, and the dangers of political extremism.
Sen. John Fetterman discusses the state of the Democratic Party, immigration, foreign policy, and the dangers of political extremism.
Plus: A new kind of seasteading, examining genocide claims, and more...
Instead of holding the president accountable, lawmakers are trying novel ways to reduce energy prices caused by Trump’s war in Iran.
Plus: A "supremely cringe" viral tweet about the Supreme Court
A recent YouGov poll shows the Court is likely less unpopular than before. The tariff ruling may have given it a boost. The poll has several other notable findings, as well.
The FCC chairman seems determined to impose a requirement that would amount to a ban on interviews with political candidates.
I will participate, along Prof. Paul Finkelman, and Gabriel Chin.
The 2-1 decision concludes Trump's massive new tariffs are illegal because there is no "balance of payments deficit" of the kind needed to authorize them.
The fiscal objection is serious. But the deeper problem is that the proposal misunderstands the saving behavior of the households it aims to help.
From immigration and guns to executive power, transgender athletes, and mail-in ballots, these are the Supreme Court cases to watch out for in May and June.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche implausibly claims prosecutors can prove Comey "knowingly and willfully" threatened to murder the president.
After trying to open the Strait of Hormuz by force, the U.S. is ready to accept an Iranian proposal it had rejected.
The president is not shy about using government power to punish people for saying things that offend him.
An initiative that would streamline California's development-killing environmental review law appears to be headed to the ballot.
Trump joins a long line of presidents unwilling to be transparent about the causes and goals of their adventurism abroad.
The case defies more than half a century of rulings on the “true threat” exception to the First Amendment.
Congress hasn't voted to declare war since 1942, yet the legislative branch constantly refuses to rein in presidents.
A trade deal that can be terminated by one person at any time and for any reason isn't really a trade deal at all.
Plus: Rudy Giuliani hospitalized, rules relaxed for foreign physicians, cities without children, and more...
As I saw at a recent conference, the two groups are similar in many ways. But there are a few notable differences.
President Donald Trump and his predecessors spent decades putting the U.S. on a path toward war against Iran.
It limits executive power grabs in this field, as well as others.
Legally, Trump must either cease operations or ask Congress for approval. He did neither, and Congress just went on recess.
Cole Tomas Allen's actions just don't make sense, even in his own words, or in a time of political polarization.
A compilation of posts by various legal scholars, including myself.
The president had promised that private donations would cover the East Wing renovation.
The brief, which asks a federal judge to reconsider an injunction blocking the project, reads like it was transcribed from the president's Truth Social account.
Conservative legal commentator Gregg Nunziata outlines reasons why conservatives should reject broad views of executive power.
Trump is making the same mistakes Nixon did, doubling down on pointless threats to save face.
Even Republican critics of the Federal Reserve chairman's performance rejected the notion that he had broken the law by lying about the renovation of the central bank's headquarters.
Calls for more aggressive security measures evoke the post-9/11 security theater that brought us the TSA.
Plus: White House Correspondents' Association attacker was angry about strikes on Venezuelan boats and Iranian schools, another airline bailout could be coming, and more...
The agency issued "national priority vouchers" for the two drugs six days after President Donald Trump promised to facilitate approval of psychedelic therapies.
Hungary is Europe's basket case, a nation that saw little economic progress under Orbán—as well as diminishing freedoms.
The bureau reportedly investigated the author of a New York Times story that made FBI Director Kash Patel look bad.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche's distinction between medical and recreational cannabis is hard to reconcile with the relevant scientific and statutory criteria.
About 1,100 Afghans currently stranded at a military base in Qatar could be relocated to the crisis-addled African country.
Plus: skyway socialism, reconsider the lobster, D.C.'s urban growth, and more...
Plus: Does Trump expect to lose the birthright citizenship case?
When it costs more to build a house, it also costs more to rebuild one.
The Trump administration is stuck in a standoff that is unstable and damaging to the entire world.
Has the Cold War-era military alliance outlived its usefulness?
The medical model assumes that people should be allowed to use psychedelics only for government-approved reasons.
Donald Trump is an unlikely but powerful champion of drug reform.
Before joining the Trump administration last year, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer lobbied for tariffs that limited fertilizer imports and drove up prices for American farmers.
The president's facilitation of research and FDA review could help make psychedelics available to approved patients. But what about everyone else?
Democrats can't muster the votes to impeach and remove Trump, or even to stop an illegal war. The 25th Amendment would be even more difficult.
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