Voters Like Early Voting and Voter ID, No Matter What Politicians Say
Majorities of Americans want casting a ballot to be easy and secure.
Majorities of Americans want casting a ballot to be easy and secure.
Stop treating politics like team sports, even though you can now bet on both.
Links to all my writings on these topics.
More than presidential politics or #AnticipatoryObedience, economics is to blame (or thank) for the long, slow death of a publishing anachronism.
Dave Smith is for Trump. Jacob Grier is for Harris. David Stockman says we're screwed either way.
You might as well lose some weight while you’re losing your mind.
The ballot initiatives would allow recreational marijuana use in Florida and the Dakotas, authorize medical marijuana in Nebraska, and decriminalize five natural psychedelics in Massachusetts.
Recently released and unrepentant, Steve Bannon returns one week before Election Day with his same old talking points.
The Stony Brook sociologist discusses how progressives are having a hard time processing why more and more black and Latino voters are supporting Donald Trump.
Plus: Kamala Harris' closing argument, the FTC's harassment of Musk-owned Twitter, and more
The Republican presidential candidate’s views do not reflect any unifying principle other than self-interest.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was running for President, but now he isn't and he does not want to be on the ballot in states where that might hurt Trump.
Proposition 33 would repeal all of California's state-level limits on rent control. It's passage could prove to be a disaster for housing supply in the Golden State.
A new IMF study finds that a global increase in tariffs could decrease global GDP by nearly 1 percent by 2025 and over 1 percent by 2026.
From taxes to special loans to price gouging, the Trump and Harris campaigns have engaged in a race to see who can pander hardest.
Kamala Harris' closing pitch to voters is exactly the same one Joe Biden had been making.
Plus: Elon Musk's purportedly illegal scheme, nicotine nation, and more...
In 2021 Trump called bitcoin a "scam" but he seems to have realized his political coalition includes cryptocurrency enthusiasts.
Plus: A listener asks the editors if there are closet Trump voters within the halls of Reason.
Despite his cluelessness, the former president's inclination to punish constitutionally protected speech reflects his authoritarian disregard for civil liberties.
Plus: Trump at Madison Square Garden, Florida's abortion amendment, Israel's Iran retaliation, and more...
People are letting politics poison relationships, workplaces, and our whole society.
When your opponents are accusing you of trying to subvert democracy, maybe don't suggest that it "makes a lot of sense" to ignore the will of the voters.
The Dispatch asked four immigration policy specialists (including myself) to write pieces on the pros and cons of the presidential candidates' immigration policies.
After proposing a deduction for interest paid on car loans, the former president suggested it would apply only to vehicles made in America.
A new report shows that politically connected companies were better able to navigate the exclusion process and avoid paying tariffs during the Trump administration.
Escape the election madness with a shared platter of Ethiopian food and a side of togetherness.
The former president says the government should be funded like it was in 1890. So where's the plan to reset spending to 1890s levels?
Why I'm voting for Harris in the 2024 election.
Harris won’t fix her men problem by listening to pundits.
News organizations lack the courage and "moral clarity" to be transparent about their political leanings.
Libertarians probably aren't buying what Liz Cheney is selling.
Chase Oliver, Jill Stein, and Randal Terry fiercely debated whether the government should get much smaller, much larger, or much holier.
Plus: Puberty blockers study suppressed by doctors, organ donation on the rise, and more...
Kamala Harris and Tim Walz both back marijuana legalization, but they took different paths to get there.
Both candidates have promised a litany of special favors to handpicked constituencies. If you don't fit into the right categories, you'll pay the price.
Both candidates are making a final big government, populist pitch to undecided voters.
Plus: Tax brackets have arrived, plagiarism scandals, Israel obliterates more of Hezbollah, and more...
Harris' plan to extend at-home care to Medicare recipients is yet another example of wasteful spending.
Kate Barr is running for state senate in North Carolina, hoping to raise awareness about the effects of gerrymandering.
As millions of Christians plan to sit out the election, church leaders face tough choices about how to inspire their congregations without violating the law.
Plus: Kevorkians in Canada, Jill Stein needs to chill, Chinese tell Cubans to stop with the Communism, and more...
Plus: A listener asks the editors if the prospect of Supreme Court nominations is reason enough to favor Trump over Harris in this year’s presidential election?
While it is not true that "homicides are skyrocketing," recent trends in other kinds of violent crime are murkier.
How the equal time rule is helping him hijack the airwaves.
Rick Pildes offers cautionary notes about specualtive fear-mongering about the administration of the 2024 election.