Trump's Self-Promotion Is Always Shameless and Sometimes Illegal
The president tramples the rule of law in his rush to glorify himself.
The president tramples the rule of law in his rush to glorify himself.
Even as the White House backs away from its foolish tariff plans, the Trump administration keeps revealing why it should never have had these powers in the first place.
The Justice Department signals a retreat from defending the blatantly corrupt scheme, which provoked vigorous objections from Republican lawmakers.
Plus: California's races, how not to blow an inheritance, life extension hits the wall, and more...
It was published on the Society for the Rule of Law's Checks and Balances substack.
The decision is a modest but welcome victory for the rule of law.
The only winning move is not to play. But if you must, a new book offers some suggestions.
One order temporarily blocks money for the president's "Anti-Weaponization Fund." The other asks whether the agreement is a fraudulent "product of collusion."
They claim the injunction requiring refunds cannot be universal, and can only apply to those businesses who filed lawsuits seeking recovery.
The president’s habitual attempts to criminalize dissent hark back to tyrants of yore.
George Washington actively opposed the U.S. Mint putting his face on coinage, as it would've resembled the reverence reserved for monarchs.
After nine months of murdering suspected cocaine smugglers, the Trump administration has no evidence that the strategy is working as advertised.
"There's no deals that can be made for a cabinet position when you're sacrificing our set of principles in our platform," says Evan McMahon.
Any self-styled advocate for limited government should be furious about Trump's $1.8 billion slush fund, but few Republicans are willing to denounce it.
The U.S. Treasury is trying to fight the kind of trade embargo that it usually imposes on other countries.
The president's last-minute endorsement of Paxton was driven by his petty grievances against incumbent Sen. John Cornyn, who was clearly the safer bet to retain the seat.
Using taxpayer money to reward the president’s allies has nothing to do with the president's claims against the IRS.
Plus: Spencer Pratt’s mayoral campaign rattles Los Angeles, Trump’s “Anti-Weaponization Fund" sparks backlash, and the editors revisit Project 2025
The House passes a housing bill that protects build-to-rent development while still cracking down on large investors.
Despite the administration's arguments, a multibillion-dollar settlement fund with no judicial oversight is fairly unprecedented.
I participated, along with prominent legal scholars Gabriel Chin and Paul Finkelman.
The president has fought to make sure alleged victims of government misconduct cannot get compensation. What changed?
The GOP has shifted from endorsing conservative ideas to embodying the whims of one man.
I gave the talk earlier this week.
Instead of making the case for war in Venezuela, Iran, and Cuba, the White House has been digging up conflicts from long ago.
In one lawsuit after another, the president has claimed damages in amounts completely disconnected from reality.
Impeachment is the appropriate remedy for this type of outright violation of the public trust.
They cost each American household roughly $1,000 in 2025, with more coming in 2026.
The decision means the injunction blocking collection of the tariffs will not be blocked while litigation continues.
The Trump administration has come up with contradictory reasons to avoid admitting to an obvious, terrible mistake.
Perry County Sheriff Nick Weems preposterously claimed that Larry Bushart had threatened "mass violence" at a school.
The Trump administration thought it was repeating the Venezuelan model in Iran—when it was doing something much more ambitious and risky.
Plus: Makeup company better than the MTA, phones and the birthrate, Ebola spreads, and more...
Trump's signature policies are pushing prices higher—and voters are pushing back.
If this is how the Republican Party treats the libertarian-leaning lawmakers in its midst, then libertarians should take note and act accordingly.
Whatever happens in Kentucky's GOP primary, the populist right no longer even pretends to care about spending or government overreach.
Plus: inflation surges, Mamdani claims he closed New York City’s budget gap without cutting services, and a listener asks how to develop political confidence
Colorado's governor agreed with a state appeals court that the former Mesa County clerk had been punished for her wacky beliefs about the 2020 election as well as her illegal conduct.
Plus: Ed Gallrein won't talk about his background, and Sen. Bill Cassidy bites the dust.
Partisan political actors have seized on a vague and unsupported "hush money" allegation.
Central planning from Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, President Donald Trump, and others reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of what makes private markets work.
Should it take more than a 5–4 vote for the Supreme Court to strike down a federal law?
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.
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