The Hidden Politics of Whiskey Prices
Donald Trump is determined to make everything from Canadian whiskey to Mexican avocados more expensive. Can anyone stop him?
Donald Trump is determined to make everything from Canadian whiskey to Mexican avocados more expensive. Can anyone stop him?
The White House accidentally leaked military plans in Yemen to a journalist—and demonstrated how unconstitutional U.S. war making has become.
While he can't get rid of the department outright, a new executive order attempts the next best thing.
The president says those legislators are "subject to investigation at the highest level," notwithstanding their pardons and the Speech or Debate Clause.
Plus: A listener asks the editors whether a Kamala Harris presidency would have been preferable.
The cowardice of Congress will continue fueling the growth of executive power.
Every cut helps, but that's not where the money is.
FCC v. Consumers’ Research could dismantle a massive slush fund run by unelected regulators and industry insiders.
Reform could replace an unsustainable boondoggle with lower costs, more freedom, and better care.
Entitlements are a much bigger expense, but that doesn't mean the waste doesn't matter.
Handouts to corporations distort the market, breed corruption, and politicize the economy.
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.
Means-test Social Security, raise the retirement age, and let us invest our own money.
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.
At the current rate of inflation, the dollar will lose 33 cents of purchasing power within a decade.
A useful example of how meaningful regulatory reform requires legislative action--and not just the passage of Congressional Review Act resolutions.
"If the Republican budget passes, the deficit gets worse, not better," says Rep. Thomas Massie. He's right.
The president is positioning himself to have much greater control over a smaller, enfeebled federal bureaucracy.
It tries to offset as much as $4.8 trillion—mostly for tax cut extensions—with only $1.5 trillion in supposed spending reductions.
His position is grounded in concerns about the separation of powers that presidents of both major parties have raised for many years.
Plus: A listener asks the editors to guess if the real reason Donald Trump is so passionate about tariffs is because he sees them as a deal-making tool rather than a purely economic instrument.
The federal leviathan can’t be dismantled by executive action alone. To truly cut spending and rein in the bureaucracy, the administration needs buy-in from the branch that built it.
Even if the Department of Government Efficiency eliminates all improper payments and fraud, we'll still be facing a debt explosion—which requires structural reform.
It's a good sign that the president is calling on critics of the federal government's lack of transparency to staff his administration.
The bill would permanently schedule fentanyl-related substances as Schedule I drugs—and impede therapeutic research.
Much cutting. Very waste. But the Department of Government Efficiency might not have the legal and budgetary chops to actually reduce spending.
Almost exactly one year after Congress swore off self-inflicted fiscal crises, we're back to the same tired theatrics.
Billions of dollars in government revenue is a no-brainer.
In four years, Biden issued regulations costing an estimated $1.8 trillion, by far the highest total in American history.
A law passed in 2022 requires the president to give Congress a "substantive rationale" for removing inspectors general. Trump has not done that.
Not doing so could be harmful for just about everyone.
They are allied countries with which the U.S. has a trade deal (a deal negotiated by Trump, no less), but presidential emergency powers are nearly limitless.
New historical evidence on the ERA's invalidity.
Biden’s preemptive pardons and Trump’s blanket relief for Capitol rioters both set dangerous precedents.
The popular video app restored service in the U.S. after President-elect Donald Trump promised to postpone a federal ban.
Riley's murder was an atrocity. But the law bearing her name is a grab bag of authoritarian policies that have little to do with her death.
With just hours to go before it is set to shut down, many senators and representatives are still posting on the app they claim is too dangerous for the rest of us to use.
"I cannot profess the kind of certainty I would like to have about the arguments and record before us," writes Justice Gorsuch.
The Supreme Court appears poised to uphold a ban on the app, but many creators aren't so sure.
The act doesn't target violent criminals and sex offenders, and is likely to harm innocent people and divert resources from genuine anti-crime efforts. It also makes it easier for state governments to try to impede legal immigration.
Plus: Evading congestion pricing, expelling Hondurans (and the U.S. military), and more...
After a delay, Johnson secured the slimmest of majorities.
The libertarian-adjacent congressman says he "definitely has no Fs to give now" and promises to vote against Mike Johnson.
The Caesar Act was meant to punish Bashar Assad’s government. It’s now a serious obstacle to Syria’s reconstruction.
The House Ethics Committee's findings, combined with Gaetz's lack of relevant experience, again raise the question of why Donald Trump picked him for attorney general.
The 81-year-old congresswoman has not voted since July, at which point she apparently moved into an eldercare facility.
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