Andrew McCarthy on "Why Trump's Section 122 Tariffs Are Illegal"
The prominent conservative legal commentator outlines the case against Trump's latest tariff power grab.
The prominent conservative legal commentator outlines the case against Trump's latest tariff power grab.
It wasn't the Court's opinion that is an "embarrassment."
It covers many issues raised by the decision.
What explains the fracture in the Supreme Court's "conservative bloc"?
Thanks to our victory in the tariff case before the Supreme Court, businesses that paid billions of dollars in illegally collected tariffs can seek refunds. But the process may be difficult.
The new tariff will be implemented under a 1974 law that gives the president authority to impose tariffs for up to 150 days.
The battle against the president's so-called reciprocal tariffs is won, but the war for free trade and a stable business environment continues.
There are many laws that explicitly authorize the president to impose taxes on imports, but they include limits that Trump was keen to avoid.
In a 6-3 decision, the Court ruled that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act does not authorize tariffs.
Satellite broadcasting is a strategic counter to state censorship.
The cost of paying the interest is now the central story, and it's a grim one.
Trump's second term is wrecking the Grand Old Party—and Democrats' refusal to own up to Biden's failure is killing the party of Jefferson and Obama.
It's a good thing that trade deficits aren't actually a national emergency.
Plus: the same ole hawkish lies, a familial connection to Barry Goldwater's nomination, and the future of media is prediction markets on Substack.
Like the Iraq War, the planned war with Iran is built on false premises. Unlike the Iraq War, there hasn’t even been a real public debate.
Exiled journalist Fardad Farahzad discusses how Iranians get uncensored news, the state of the protest movement, and whether the Islamic Republic is losing its grip on power.
A grand jury and a federal judge rejected the president’s vendetta against legislators who produced a video about the duty to refuse unlawful military orders.
A federal judge has set the date for the president's push to punish a news organization he dislikes, again.
Finally given a chance to influence trade policy, the vast majority of House Republicans decided it was more important to keep President Donald Trump happy.
Plus: boat subsidies, metaphor alerts, and more Epstein fallout...
A combination of legal action and political resistance helped deal Trump a defeat.
But the numbers are a long way from a veto-proof majority, so Wednesday's vote may be a purely symbolic victory for free traders.
Government agencies rarely check whether their handouts go to the right people. Why?
The story is an exercise in pettiness but also a perfect reason why Congress and the Supreme Court should limit the president's power grab.
The Kentucky congressman tells Reason that Republicans and Democrats engaged in a “cover-up” of epic proportions that will haunt U.S. politics for years.
The president was offended by a video reminding military personnel of their duty to disobey unlawful orders.
While running against Kamala Harris, Trump claimed homicides were "skyrocketing," disregarding the data contradicting that assertion.
Plus: Bad Bunny’s halftime show and more on Super Bowl LX
Plus: Speaker of the House Mike Johnson embraces warrantless ICE searches, the Super Bowl halftime culture war, and Trump continues funding the Department of Education
The Super Bowl is a celebration of excellence, and that includes the halftime show.
Plus: Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in prison, endemic fraud in federal welfare, Ghislaine Maxwell won't talk to Congress, and more...
Spurred by a hostile U.S. president, Europe struggles against stagnant economies to rearm.
Trump's call to "nationalize elections" leads prominent election law scholar Rick Hasen to reverse his longstanding support for such a policy.
A new poll finds that even white men without college degrees, a key voting constituency for Trump, don’t approve of the president’s handling of the economy.
2025 is on track to have the largest drop in the murder rate in recorded history.
Trump's endorsements of Viktor Orbán and Sanae Takaichi, like Clinton's support for Boris Yeltsin or Obama's opposition to Benjamin Netanyahu, do not make America great.
Plus: assessing Trump’s first year, the dysfunction of Washington, D.C., and the politics of the Super Bowl. (Recorded live in Washington, D.C.)
The right to bear arms is inherently anti-authoritarian at a time when Trump wields authority.
"It's not that South Park suddenly quote got political. It's that politics became pop," co-creator Trey Parker said in a recent interview.
The Department of Education is getting a bigger budget, less than a year after President Donald Trump ordered the department's closure.
It's a bad idea, just like it was a bad idea five years ago when Democrats proposed something similar.
Allowing more homes to be built on existing residential land would be good for homeowners, homebuyers, and homebuilders.
Plus: Why is the Supreme Court’s tariff decision taking so long?
These bureaucratic maneuvers are making it harder for immigrants to work, learn, and live in the United States.
Although a federal judge declined to issue a preliminary injunction requested by Minnesota and the Twin Cities, the plaintiffs should still prevail on their claims that the federal government’s actions there are unconstitutional.
The president says he would rather increase prices for homeowners than drive prices down.
It is now up on SSRN, and also under submission to law reviews.
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