SCOTUS Sounds Ready To Let Trump Fire FTC Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter
Plus: It's the final day of Reason's webathon.
Plus: It's the final day of Reason's webathon.
It's not surprising that the NRA and other Second Amendment advocates spoke out against a trans firearm ban floated by the Trump administration.
The Cato Institute has posted one on its website.
Paramount Skydance is banking on the Ellison family's relationship with Trump following Netflix outbidding the company to acquire Warner Bros.
The footage shows what happened to the survivors of the September 2 attack that inaugurated the president's deadly campaign against suspected drug boats.
A former leader of Al Qaeda has convinced Washington that he’s a liberal reformer. Now comes the hard part of following through.
For Trump, tariffs are a solution to every problem, and his trade war is more about the vibes than the economics.
The Reason editors answer your questions on policy, politics, pop culture, and more in this annual webathon event.
The commander who ordered a second missile strike worried that the helpless men he killed might be able to salvage cocaine from the smoldering wreck.
We can make housing more affordable and empower people to "vote with their feet" by curbing exclusionary zoning. Left and right should support that instead of counterproductive snake oil like rent control, tariffs, and deportations.
When the so-called "communist lunatic" and the so-called "fascist" find common ground, it means the country needs an intervention.
Adm. Frank M. Murphy reportedly told lawmakers a controversial second strike was necessary because drugs on the burning vessel remained a threat.
What's wrong with Big Tech isn't the fault of libertarianism.
Regardless of what the defense secretary knew or said about the September 2 boat attack, the forces he commands are routinely committing murder in the guise of self-defense.
An obscure bureau of the U.S. Treasury is using USA PATRIOT Act powers to sniff out under-the-table employment.
Plus: Tennessee election results, Three Mile Island controversy, immigration enforcement will hit Somali community, and more...
Since 2007, we've won millions of hearts and minds to libertarianism with deeply moving images. And starting NOW, your webathon dollars are matched up to $100,000!
The 3rd Circuit’s ruling against Alina Habba highlights a disturbing pattern of legal evasion.
Instead of asking whether a particular boat attack went too far, Congress should ask how the summary execution of criminal suspects became the new normal.
The Trump administration's pivot toward socialism did not come without warning.
Even if you accept the president's assertion of an "armed conflict" with drug smugglers, blowing apart survivors of a boat strike would be a war crime.
Friedrich Hayek's most popular work was dedicated to "the socialists of all parties." That phrase perfectly captures politics in 2025.
Plus: War with Venezuela looms, a National Guard member shot in D.C. dies, and Sean Duffy wants you to stop flying in your pajamas.
Biden said "companies are investing in America again." Instead, America is investing in companies—and getting little in return.
Global markets make Black Friday deals and generous holiday gift-giving possible.
Stopping all immigration processing for Afghan migrants is unjust and undermines rather than furthers the goal of combatting terrorism.
The president loves freeing people. His controversial clemency grants should not obscure the fact that the pardon power is incredibly important.
President Trump has already announced plans to deploy 500 more troops to the nation's capital.
The Trump administration is desperately trying to criminalize a video noting that service members have no obligation to follow unlawful orders.
A rare instance in which courts were willing to impose sanctions upon sanctionable conduct.
As fans of horseshoe theory point out, the political extremes might differ on details, but they have a lot in common.
The president’s reaction to a supposedly "seditious" video illustrates his tendency to portray criticism of him as a crime.
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.
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