Trump Attacks Biden on Drug Policy From the Left
It's an interesting strategy for a president who ran in 2016 on a Nixonian "law and order" platform.
It's an interesting strategy for a president who ran in 2016 on a Nixonian "law and order" platform.
While the 2017 tax cuts didn't deliver the results promised by Trump and his magical-thinking supporters, the administration has delivered some economic expansion, some job creation, and some investment growth.
The Hawaiian representative's two delegates will no longer be enough to earn her a spot in the upcoming CNN/Univision debate in Phoenix.
Warren’s supporters were so enamored with her righteousness that they struggled to see her obvious flaws.
The Massachusetts senator failed to expand her appeal beyond a core group of highly educated upper-middle-class voters.
"Google is not now, nor (to the Court's knowledge) has it ever been, an arm of the United States government," wrote District Judge Stephen Wilson.
The former New York City mayor has never been good at concealing his conviction that he is smarter and better than the rest of us.
Future of Freedom Foundation founder outpolls the competition in California and North Carolina
Plus: Libertarian Party results, Bloomberg's bad showing, Gabbard gets one delegate, California targets porn performers, and more...
Michael Bloomberg spent at least $500 million in his bid for a Super Tuesday blitz. He came away with...American Samoa.
It's a two-man race and the Delaware Democrat is a comeback kid.
The pundits and newspapers pushed Warren, Klobuchar, and Buttigieg, but Super Tuesday voters just wanted boring old Biden and Bernie.
The anti-war candidate's scoring of a delegate in American Samoa might earn her a spot on in the next Democratic debate.
Deciding which Democratic front-runner is the lesser of two evils is not easy.
District Attorney Jackie Lacey faces re-election today against a tough field calling for more criminal justice reforms.
"Compliments on a woman's appearance that some men, including me, might have once incorrectly thought were okay, were never okay."
Unraveling panic, policy, and bad metaphors on the Reason Roundtable podcast
Klobuchar is a cop too, though it took a little longer for her record to catch up with her.
Fining non-voters would show that government is all about forcing people to do things just to make politicians happy.
Plus: South Carolina primary tallies, coronavirus claims two lives in Washington state, and more...
If the ex-mayor's fondness for relentless government intervention is "moderate," it's no wonder voters are kicking the tires on more "extreme" major-party candidates.
Promises to fight for Democratic nominee
Biden's win in South Carolina gives his campaign new life, increases the likelihood of a brokered convention in Milwaukee, and ends Tom Steyer's campaign.
Local activists have argued that the housing officials in charge of reviewing the Suffolk Downs mega-development has violated residents' civil rights by not translating enough planning documents into Spanish, Arabic
The presidential candidate reserves the right to wage unauthorized wars, kill Americans in foreign countries, prosecute journalists, and selectively flout the law.
Shifting the process from the Justice Department to the White House can help eliminate bureaucracy and meddling from prosecutors.
No matter how bad the outbreak might turn out to be, politicians will find a way to make it worse.
Trump has long complained that libel laws need to be loosened to allow more lawsuits against media outlets.
In between Trump's restrictionism and Democrats' Medicare-for-all-undocumented enthusiasm lies a party basically unified behind mass immigration without welfare.
The presidential candidate's explanation of his sudden reversal on the issue is utterly implausible.
Medicare for All would cost far, far more than he says.
The New York Times technology reporter is revealing how social media is encouraging individual expression.
Plus: Barr's backdoor to throttling encryption, a ban on swingers clubs, why a viral econ chart is wrong, and more...
But Sanders is also right that America has made some terrible foreign policy mistakes in the past.
Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders correctly diagnose the problem, but fail to provide an adequate solution.
The Midwestern moderate isn't alone is fretting about the radicalism of the current Democratic front-runner.
As Sanders steamrolls toward the Democratic nomination, the Reason Roundtable podcast dissects the panic attacks among MSNBC anchors, conservative commie-haters, and the bipartisan establishment elite.
The real resistance is made up of those who refuse to be governed by any of the wannabe rulers.
Plus: Congress set to reauthorize PATRIOT Act provisions, Steyer surges in South Carolina, and more...
Are Democrats about to nominate a socialist for president?
Nobody is being misled by this obviously joking debate clip. But this sort of ginned-up outrage will be used to target political opponents.
Plus: red spots in blue states, blue spots in red states, the White House admits tariffs have hurt manufacturing, and more...
Plus: Bloomberg's rough night, libertarian Catholicism, Philadelphia's soda tax still sucks, and more...
Don't believe those who tell you that Sanders is some sort of centrist.
Bloomberg says "We're not going to throw out capitalism"; Sanders isn't so sure.
This was supposed to be the electable alternative?
"The policy was abhorrent," Biden said of Bloomberg's stop-and-frisk program. Yes, but so was pretty much every criminal justice policy Biden pushed through the Senate.
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