Rep. Chip Roy on Spending, Immigration, and the American Dream
"I think members of Congress believe that they get more popularity in votes by spending money. I actually disagree with that," the Texas Republican tells Reason.
"I think members of Congress believe that they get more popularity in votes by spending money. I actually disagree with that," the Texas Republican tells Reason.
U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut concluded that the president's description of "War ravaged Portland" was "simply untethered to the facts."
Two bills recently introduced by Hawley would set American AI and the economy back.
Democrats should use the shutdown to curb the Trump administration's worst authoritarian abuses, not to try to goad Republicans into eliminating an important check on executive excess.
The federal government continues paying its biggest bills during a shutdown, and hundreds of thousands of federal employees get a belatedly paid vacation.
Refusing to fund the government is the primary way minority party lawmakers can check the excesses of the executive branch and the majority party.
The fight over whether to extend "temporary" health insurance subsidies is really a fight over how best to hide the costs created by the Affordable Care Act.
Reason's Peter Suderman and Eric Boehm discuss the government shutdown live at 3 p.m. Eastern time today.
The legal rationales for prosecuting James Comey, Adam Schiff, and Letitia James suggest the president is determined to punish them one way or another.
The Department of Homeland Security will retain 95 percent of its employees if the government shuts down and remain funded in large part by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
Take your opportunities for smaller government where you find them.
Plus: Eric Adams drop out, Assata Shakur gets fawned over, James Comey gets roasted, and more...
By demanding that the Justice Department punish the former FBI director for wronging him, the president provided evidence to support a claim of selective or vindictive prosecution.
The FBI director's portrayal of the case exemplifies the emptiness of his promise that there would be "no retributive actions" against the president's enemies.
Plus: Robert Munsch chooses Canadian healthcare, Argentina in trouble, ignoring Greta, and more...
Forcing the sale of a social media company for political reasons was always going to be a power grab for the White House—whether its occupant was Democratic or Republican.
House Republicans passed a resolution that prevents Congress from ending the national emergency Trump is using to impose tariffs until March 31.
Louisiana Rep. Clay Higgins, who once opposed government jawboning, now says people should be banned from both social media and public life over their posts.
The same legal theory that tripped up Joe Biden's student loan scheme could also sink Donald Trump's tariffs.
The appeals court blocked the removal of alleged Venezuelan gang members under that law "because we find no invasion or predatory incursion."
The federal law relies on a risible reading of the Commerce Clause to restrict a constitutional right.
An antiquated law gives high school and college football first dibs on Fridays and Saturdays.
Seven judges agreed that the president's assertion of unlimited authority to tax imports is illegal and unconstitutional.
Congress holds the power of the purse in our system of government, and further eroding congressional responsibility for spending decisions will not end well.
The president's clear attempt to interfere in the Federal Reserve is not a one-off crisis.
Should they brag about raising taxes, like the White House is doing, or try to distance themselves from those same tax increases?
A recent federal appeals court decision underlines the importance of that safeguard.
Texas Rep. Chip Roy joins Nick Gillespie to talk about runaway spending, the uphill battle for health care reform, and where immigration fits into the liberty vs. sovereignty debate.
The latest escalation in the showdown between the Trump administration and D.C. elected officials
A rushed attempt to regulate artificial intelligence has left lawmakers scrambling to fix their own mistakes.
It's a drop in the bucket compared to the national debt, but any wasteful government spending should be eliminated.
The Constitution requires apportionment to be based on a count of all "persons," excluding only "Indians not taxed."
The president is claiming "unbounded authority" to impose import taxes based on a law that does not mention them.
Lawmakers say a new DHS rule requiring advance notice for detention center visits undermines congressional oversight.
An unholy alliance between MAGA and progressives to ban research on an emergency backup plan to cool the planet may be emerging.
The notion that NPR can somehow become unbiased is about as believable as the IRS sending you a fruit basket to commend you for filing your taxes.
Green energy is promising. But subsidies distort the tax code, misallocate capital, and favor companies already in the game.
The bill, which could pass the Senate on Wednesday, would trim 13 cents from every $100 of federal spending.
In a bill packed with spending, one provision offers real gains for health care choice and savings.
More questions arise over how Florida’s newest immigration detention center is being funded by the Trump administration.
The taxes on sound suppressors, short-barreled rifles, and short-barreled shotguns, originally enacted in 1934, were meant to be prohibitive, imposing bans in the guise of raising revenue.
The ban is a bad law. But leaving it on the books and willfully ignoring it sets a potentially more dangerous precedent.
Congress should now turn its attention to abolishing the unnecessary federal education bureaucracy.
This is what Washington calls compromise: The House proposes $1, the Senate proposes $2, and somehow, the government ends up spending $3.
Plus: Trade deal with Vietnam, Romanian right-wing presidential candidate sent to trial, and more...
Plus: Zohran Mamdani doesn't understand what New York's families need, Lia Thomas titles revoked, and more...
Now nearly 100 state AI laws will remain in force—and nearly 1,000 more are already waiting in the wings.
Republicans are creating a budgetary loophole that will allow Democrats to pass Medicare for All and pretend it costs almost nothing.