L.A. Mayor Karen Bass Says You Can Defeat NIMBYism by Building Less
Plus: The DOJ and RealPage reach a settlement, the ROAD to Housing Act hits a speed bump, and Donald Trump and Zohran Mamdani talk housing policy.
Plus: The DOJ and RealPage reach a settlement, the ROAD to Housing Act hits a speed bump, and Donald Trump and Zohran Mamdani talk housing policy.
Plus: DOGE is disbanded, Trump attempts to influence the Warner Bros. merger, and Democrats tell the military to reject illegal orders
The charges were dismissed without prejudice, so the Justice Department can try again.
The Department of Government Efficiency didn't accomplish much. We still have cause to mourn its official closure.
Trump respects outreach from opponents more than submissive flattery from friends.
The National Review founder's flexible approach to politics defined conservatism as we know it.
In Trump's first term, he exempted many Chinese toys and household items from tariff hikes. This time, they're subject to a 30 percent import tax.
The president's authoritarian response to a video posted by six members of Congress, who he says "should be arrested and put on trial," validates their concerns.
Trump's 28-point "peace" plan for the Russia-Ukraine War is a reprise of the 1938 Munich agreement, which dismembered Czechoslovakia for the benefit of Nazi Germany. But US and European supporters of Ukraine can do much to resist it.
Blowing up boats won’t stop drugs—but it could sink Trump.
She's praised Nancy Pelosi, said Republicans aren't doing enough to make things affordable, and is generally making a lot of sense. That's weird, but also good.
I coauthored the article with four other legal scholars from across the political spectrum.
Interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan concedes that the grand jury never saw the "edited" version of the indictment.
Real industrial policy has been tried—in many countries, by governments of every ideology. It fails every time for the same reason.
Sen. Rand Paul explains why he wants the Epstein files released, lays out his case against Trump’s tariffs and military strikes in Venezuela, and argues that he and Rep. Thomas Massie are the last voices in Congress still committed to libertarian ideals.
The president thinks TV networks have a legal obligation to cover him the way he prefers. The FCC's chairman seems to agree.
The government can look at your phone records whenever it wants, but it's a different story when we're talking about his metadata.
There probably is no “client list,” but the files could help answer some pressing questions—and open the door to more revelations.
A magistrate judge says the government’s missteps may warrant dismissal of the charges against the former FBI director.
Plus: Tariff rollbacks and the affordability debate, Trump considers direct talks with Maduro as unauthorized strikes continue, and a listener asks what it would take to move healthcare out of government hands
Trump's decision to reduce the tariffs on Swiss goods came just days after a Swiss delegation lavished the president with a variety of expensive gifts.
Plus: Mamdani copies de Blasio, Swiss delegation buys better tariffs from Trump, Xinjiang nuke testing, and more...
There is no non-racist justification for prioritizing white Afrikaner South Africans while closing the door to virtually all other groups.
Since long before Biden and Trump, presidents have been going to great lengths to keep their medical problems from the public.
The accuracy and reliability of BLS data on inflation and jobs will depend on what the Trump administration does with it.
If lowering tariffs makes things cheaper, why stop at coffee?
I coauthored the brief on behalf of the the Cato Institute, the Brennan Center for Justice, legal scholars Geoffrey Corn and John Dehn, and myself.
His lawsuit against the BBC is likely frivolous, however.
Neither side, however, has a good plan to bring down prices.
Epstein was supposedly advising Arab countries on how to deal with America, had an audience scheduled with a Qatari prince, and close to Trump’s future ambassador to Turkey.
The president is alarming the MAGA faithful by saying he wants more high-skilled immigration. But that doesn’t mean he’s rethinking the rest of his nativism.
The Trump administration's claims that illegal migration and drug smuggling qualify as an "invasion" or a "predatory incursion" under the Alien Enemies Act go against the major questions doctrine.
Congressional investigators released emails from the late sex trafficker discussing how to leverage his relationship with the future president.
The two U.S. allies were OK with helping arrest suspected drug smugglers, but not with helping kill them.
To support chipmaker Intel, the president used our money to buy 433 million shares of Intel stock. That's not a free market.
The decision is consistent with the president's avowed concerns about "overcriminalization in federal regulations."
Trump is living in a fiscal fantasy land.
Plus: Betting scandals come to baseball, and happy Veterans Day
For the justices, the question is just how much deference the president deserves.
There are several reasons why beef prices are at a record high. Collusion isn't one of them.
The president says the affordability crisis is over, but he's also promising huge government checks. And he doesn't know how much gas costs.
Despite Trump promising to stand "with the good people of Cuba and Venezuela," his administration has fast-tracked deportations for victims of communism.
If fairness in the justice system depends on wealth or political value, we’ve missed the point of justice entirely.
On Thursday, a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit that echoed Donald Trump's claims against the Des Moines Register and pollster Ann Selzer.
Donald Trump’s new stock-buying strategy isn’t socialism, but it is a step toward a government-controlled economy.
During oral argument at the Supreme Court, Solicitor General D. John Sauer cited a letter by James Madison that completely undermines the administration’s case that its tariffs are legal.
The U.S. government is reportedly looking to put boots on the ground in Damascus to guard the border with Israel.