Joe Walsh Isn't Running on the Issues
The conservative radio host says he is running for president because Trump is “erratic" and "cruel." But Walsh has his own history to live down.
The conservative radio host says he is running for president because Trump is “erratic" and "cruel." But Walsh has his own history to live down.
The ex-congressman and talk show host thinks he can save the Republican Party.
Warren needs to take a lesson from Leonard Read's "I, Pencil."
Plus: Trump forcing U.S. companies out of China?, Joe Arpaio is running again, sex discrimination goes to the Supreme Court, and more...
We're vastly more interested in the upcoming election than we were in 2016. We're also convinced neither party represents us. What could go wrong?
True to form, the presidential hopeful is turning the conversation around war on its head.
The move would violate the First Amendment.
Sanders' plan takes aim at every part of the justice system, including typical Sanders targets like private prisons and corporate "profiteers."
The California senator's history of flip-flops reveal the emptiness of her campaign—and looming problems for her party.
Also: the politics of recession, Bernie's criminal justice plan, and stanning for Barry Manilow, all on the Reason Podcast
It's possible that the visibility of the way Biden is wrestling with his own aging could make him a more relatable and sympathetic figure. Or the Biden blunders could confirm that his moment has passed.
The Democratic presidential contender suggests that "racist threats or anti-immigrant manifestos" could justify federal gun confiscation orders.
Former media darling halted his long poll slide after the El Paso shooting by blaming it on Trump, and is now hoping Democrats forget his past centrism.
By nearly every measure, Americans are getting richer and richer. This should be cause for celebration, not concern.
The progressive senator's Trumpian anti-Bezos take is part of career-long history of fantasizing about evil billionaires.
The long shot presidential candidate wants booming cities to get rid of their restrictions on new development.
Warren doesn't merely want to turn back the clock to the pre-Trump era. She wants to raise taxes and regulations far beyond the levels of the late Obama-Biden administration.
The presidential contender nevertheless insists the law reduced mass shooting deaths.
The idea that "deficits don't matter" has been growing among Trump-supporting Republicans. Democrats are preparing to take full advantage.
Her chumming around with the worst dictators is troubling.
The 89-year-old former senator turned heads with his unique campaign strategy.
Climate change is a problem, but the end of the world is not scheduled for 2030.
The progressive push to the left among presidential candidates will alienate most Democrats and independents, helping Donald Trump to a second term.
The climate of opinion has changed so dramatically that Democrats are politically obliged to support reform.
Plus: Tulsi Gabbard is most searched candidate, Kirsten Gillibrand attacks Biden's record on women, and more...
The man who couldn't win a GOP primary on his home turf as an incumbent is polling at just 4%—though even that is better than Bill Weld.
Is he trying to find a middle ground as Dems divide on trade? Or is he just talking gibberish?
Tonight's debate became an exercise in checking privileges.
"There are people right now in prison for life for drug offenses because you stood up and used that tough-on-crime phony rhetoric."
In a testy exchange about immigration, the former vice president argued that Trump alone was the problem.
The presidential contender feels no need to defend the policies he favors, because "we all know" they are "the right thing to do."
Unlike many other policies proposed by Democratic presidential hopefuls, trade policy is something a new president can unilaterally impose.
A decade after Obamacare, the Democratic Party has embraced health care radicalism.
Plus: Pete Buttigieg's plan to destroy the gig economy, Josh Hawley's plan to destroy social media, and more...
Never before have presidential candidates offered so many giveaways.
The former Maryland congressman criticized the progressive wing of the Democratic Party for embracing such expansive government involvement.
"A gig is a job and a worker is a worker," Mayor Pete said.
Michigan and Flint authorities thought switching water providers would be a great job stimulus program.
A majority of Americans say they favor free trade. But both major parties are moving in the other direction.
Most Democratic candidates are to the left not just of Americans but of their own party.
Warren says her administration "will engage in international trade—but on our terms and only when it benefits American families." The details show she'd be opposed to trade with most developing nations.
Her proposal is supposed to chip away at the "opportunity gap."
There's a risk that if Warren and Sanders do get their way, the sucking sound will be of talent and capital fleeing America for other jurisdictions where they will be treated better.
The presidential candidate is still dodging tough questions.
The only way mandatory national service would "unify" the teens of America would be to cause them to loathe the government together.
The liberal jurist puts judicial integrity before partisan politics.