James Pogue: What Ukraine Reveals About MAGA
Vanity Fair's James Pogue dives into the dissident right, his personal experiences with MAGA, and how Ukraine policy is unfolding.
Vanity Fair's James Pogue dives into the dissident right, his personal experiences with MAGA, and how Ukraine policy is unfolding.
Entitlements are a much bigger expense, but that doesn't mean the waste doesn't matter.
Hawks from both major parties lashed out at the confirmation hearing for Trump’s nominee for top military strategist.
The president's assertion is divorced from reality, and so are the "estimated savings" touted by Elon Musk.
It's great to have presidents talking about the need for a balanced budget, but Republicans are backing a plan that will increase borrowing.
Plus: Democrat disruptions, Columbia University scrutinized by the feds, and more...
If only they were as big as the list of new spending.
The tariffs Trump has already imposed on Canada, Mexico, and China will cost an estimated $142 billion this year—and he says more are on the way.
If tariffs are a poor method of collecting revenue or strengthening trade, they're even less effective at stopping the flow of illegal drugs.
The Trump administration’s trade war leaves everyone worse off.
Plus: Tariffs go into effect, inside the fact-checker industrial complex, and more...
Making policy and passing laws is supposed to be difficult and should be left to the messy channels established by the Constitution.
Plus: A listener asks the editors how to best determine whether Trump’s second term is good or bad for individual freedom.
One bright spot from Trump's shameful behavior in the Oval Office would be if it spurs European nations to shoulder more of the burden of supporting Ukraine.
As world leaders debate, Ukrainian defenders innovate, adapt, and wage defensive war on their own terms.
Plus: Change in Russia policy, Matt Taibbi interview, Dems try gun shows, and more...
If the Department of Government Efficiency goes about this the wrong way, we could be left with both a presidency on steroids and no meaningful reduction in government.
President Donald Trump's pardon of the Silk Road creator is a rare moment of reprieve in an era of relentless government expansion.
The originalist case for a unitary executive falls apart in an era when many of the powers wielded by the executive branch were not originally supposed to be federal powers in the first place.
The GOP faces a choice about how to move forward.
Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank provides a helpful summary, with a little help from me.
And an increasingly unpopular one. Will Trump pay attention to the polls, if not the economists?
Trump's negotiations and German elections may augur the end of collective security as we've known it.
Forget boots on the ground. Now we’ll have Americans “on the land.”
At the current rate of inflation, the dollar will lose 33 cents of purchasing power within a decade.
"I'm confident that free markets and personal liberties are right for America," wrote Bezos.
“We’ve basically made an agreement with very little data,” warned one expert.
Cuts to government spending mean fewer bonds, lower borrowing costs, and potentially a break for borrowers.
Elon Musk's vague White House role is only controversial because he's trying to slash bureaucracy.
“I cannot ignore Congress’ detailed framework for refugee admissions and the limits it placed on the president’s ability to suspend the same,” said Judge Jamal Whitehead.
The presidential adviser's lack of formal authority complicates his cost-cutting mission.
Interim U.S. Attorney Ed Martin puts loyalty to Donald Trump ahead of loyalty to the Constitution.
A former Afghan intelligence officer who worked alongside U.S. forces sought safety in America. Now, under the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, his parole has been revoked, and he’s been detained without explanation.
Plus: A listener asks the editors whether it makes sense for a country to have a sovereign wealth fund.
The president's portrayal of journalism he does not like as consumer fraud is legally frivolous and blatantly unconstitutional.
The Trump administration’s math on Middle Eastern energy supplies just doesn’t add up.
It's a terrible decision for both moral and pragmatic reasons.
One perk that may materialize from Elon Musk upending the federal bureaucracy is the downfall of the government’s obsessive use of abbreviations.
The president is positioning himself to have much greater control over a smaller, enfeebled federal bureaucracy.
The newly confirmed head of the country's leading law enforcement agency has a history of advocating politically motivated investigations even while condemning them.
The penny is expensive to produce and has long outlived its usefulness.
How well-intentioned laws created new cultural conflicts—and eroded personal liberty
There's little question that Trump is taking the concept of the imperial presidency to its apogee.
Georgetown constitutional law professor Randy Barnett discusses the legality of DOGE, Trump's executive orders, and birthright citizenship.
If Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is serious about reducing military spending, he will need to embrace a narrower understanding of national security.
It tries to offset as much as $4.8 trillion—mostly for tax cut extensions—with only $1.5 trillion in supposed spending reductions.
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