4 Takeaways From the Supreme Court's 2025–2026 Term
From executive power to civil liberties, what to make of a momentous year at SCOTUS?
From executive power to civil liberties, what to make of a momentous year at SCOTUS?
U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams concludes that the case never presented a true "case or controversy" because both sides were controlled by the president.
Let's simplify this system instead of making it even more complicated.
Important progress has been made on repaying illegally collected tariffs. But serious problems remain, including some caused by the Trump Administration's efforts to keep some of the illegally collected loot.
The government says the reporters are not targets of the investigation, but such subpoenas can still have a chilling effect on the press.
The Federal Reserve reports that small businesses were less likely to be able to avoid tariff costs during 2025 and are more pessimistic about employment and revenue in 2026.
The one thing Graham was consistent about was his enthusiasm for foreign wars.
For the same reason their ranks have grown to record highs: They dislike the federal government.
Looking back through the biggest scandals in American history through the lens of Trump 2.0.
Since the beginning of his first term, the president has repeatedly used his office for personal gain.
Plus: Platner is out, so is reading, Netflix is not a monopoly, and more...
The conservative justice pushed for greater executive authority even in cases in which Trump won.
The decision rebukes the DOJ for demanding "private and sensitive" information about Georgia election workers "with no legitimate law enforcement purpose."
He understands economics about as well as he understands the limits of presidential power.
The Reform U.K. leader wants to reframe questions over his undeclared gifts as a “people vs. the establishment” fight. But a fresh mandate from Clacton won’t answer whether he followed parliamentary rules.
Plus: Should Folarin Balogun have been allowed to play? The simple fix for red card suspensions.
In sports as in foreign policy, he treats cheating as a virtue. And it doesn’t even work.
Why Trump lost big in the Supreme Court cases he cared the most about
The next Folarin Balogun could be in a field that matters much more than a soccer pitch. America should not handicap its access to such talent.
Free trade is "a direct affront to our Founding Fathers," President Donald Trump said during his first presidential campaign.
Joe Rogan and military veterans advocating for suicide prevention apparently swayed the president.
On a Fourth of July, John Quincy Adams warned against the foreign policy that his successors would later adopt.
Not only is the problem overblown. It isn't really a problem at all. It's also irrelevant to the constitutional question addressed by the Supreme Court.
First-place wins include work on America's gerontocracy, an interview with anti–death penalty activist Helen Prejean, and some Star Wars comedy.
As the United States celebrates its semiquincentennial, all age groups are less likely to love America than in the past.
A Trump memo revives debate over the right to repair.
The Supreme Court has "no shortage of tools" to enforce the separation of powers, Justice Neil Gorsuch notes. "The only real question is whether we will use them."
The White House quietly repealed tariffs on Moroccan fertilizer this week.
Videos of my interviews with C-SPAN and Fox 10 Phoenix.
Donald Trump and Zohran Mamdani both do their bit to sabotage healthy housing policy.
Understanding Trump v. Barbara.
The 6-3 decision is right, and a contrary ruling would have had horrific effects.
The Supreme Court extended presidential control over federal agencies. What could go wrong?
Tensions between today's two major presidential removal power decisions.
Marjorie Taylor Greene discusses the future of the Republican Party, the resurgence of democratic socialism, and why the political establishment always wins
The Great American State Fair promised a celebration of freedom. So why was I stuck in the air?
If the promised Cuban economic reforms are for real, the U.S. should step out of the way.
Economist Soumaya Keynes discusses Trump’s tariff policies, how China changed the global economy, and why trade wars require restraint.
Intellectual curiosity used to define the political right. Now, imbecility rules the day.
Extensive evidence indicates that the decision to end Temporary Protected Status for Haitian migrants was motivated by unconstitutional racial and ethnic discrimination. The Court's ruling on statutory issues also has flaws.
The president is forcing his biggest supporters to choke down his incompetence and delusions like so much algae.
Understanding the 6–3 decision in Mullin v. Doe.
"This indictment appears to be going way overboard, using a sledgehammer to address what might have been some infractions."
Democrats and Republicans alike dragged out the process to vote on the Iran war. Antiwar advocates say their vote still matters.
Anthropic and OpenAI may not like current federal controls on their products, but it will be consumers who end up getting screwed.
Plus: The legality of ICE masks, elder care denial, McKinsey consultants dream of pie, and more...
Robby Soave and Amber Duke discuss how the refurbishment of D.C.’s Reflecting Pool has gone off the rails.
Celebrate your independence with a subscription to Reason magazine, your most trusted source of honest, insightful news and analysis.