Elizabeth Warren Wants To Make It a Crime To Give Out Fake Info About Voting
When politicians call to punish “disinformation,” we should worry about what that definition encompasses.
When politicians call to punish “disinformation,” we should worry about what that definition encompasses.
Political hypocrisy on school choice needs to be exposed, says Reason Foundation's Corey DeAngelis.
Politicians win, taxpayers lose.
Sanders' lead over Warren has doubled since her campaign tried using a private 2018 conversation against him.
The Reason Roundtable hands out darts and laurels for the impeachment process to date, and also wades into the Democrats' great Gender Wars of 2020.
Warren claims total costs for middle-class families would go down under her plan, but there are reasons to doubt this.
The Trump administration's "phase one" deal with China will keep many tariffs in place, but Democrats don't seem to have the guts to stand up for freer trade.
Being relentlessly negative is no way to win votes, even against someone as dark and divisive as Donald Trump.
"Senator Warren, what did you think when Sanders said a woman couldn’t win the election?”
Maybe now would be a good time for Democrats to recognize that identity-politics signaling doesn't translate into votes.
Plus: Belief in vaccines down 10 percent since 2001, states with low taxes see population boosts, and more...
Expect Biden, Warren, Buttigieg, et al, to relentlessly attack the Vermont socialist, heart-attack survivor, and accused electoral misogynist.
The elimination of three health care taxes will increase the deficit by $373 billion.
She fights against school choice while her kid and grandkids go to private school.
Amity Shlaes' Great Society: A New History details the failure of massive governmental attempts to remake society.
Warren takes aim at Buttigieg and he fires back—not over policy, but over the Democratic Party's identity.
The moderators didn't see ask Elizabeth Warren about her position on the USMCA, which does a serious disservice to prospective voters.
Her lobbying tax proposal is pseudo-policy, a veneer of wonky seriousness over dubious populist dogma.
"You don't like the building? You think it's old and decaying? Then get out there and push to get a new one," she said.
A sign of just how far left Democrats have moved under Trump
Elizabeth Warren was so "#PublicSchoolProud" that she sent her son to expensive private schools for the majority of his K-12 education.
The Reason Roundtable panelists ask: Why so many hawks in the anti-Trump clump?
A new study shows that tariffs and other anti-trade policies actually benefit executives far more than the average worker.
Last night's debate started with attacks on Trump, but turned into a referendum on Elizabeth Warren.
More federal spending won’t make housing more accessible as long as regulations and zoning drive up prices.
The senator from Massachusetts thinks more Americans should join the military. Why?
"It's been tried by other nations," the New Jersey senator said.
What we won't see at tonight's debate is far more important than what's going to be on display.
By planning to pass single-payer in year three of her presidency, she’s acknowledging it will never happen at all.
The presidential campaign seems to be Warren's priority, despite the fact that she's being paid to represent the residents of Massachusetts in the U.S. Senate.
New research shows that GOP candidates lost ground in counties that were adversely affected by the trade war. In places without those effects, there were "no discernable gains" for Republicans.
The presidential candidate wanted a proposal that was airtight and easy to explain. Her plan is neither.
Related: Michael Bloomberg can't keep fantasizing about being president
What she and Bernie Sanders are proposing is nothing short of a wholesale transformation of the size and scope of government.
The Democratic candidates are making promises they can’t deliver.
She hasn't come up with a plan to pay for single-payer. She's come up with a plan to let her claim she has a plan.
"Despite its usage by academics and cultural influencers, 98% of Latinos prefer other terms to describe their ethnicity."
Senator can't even accurately represent a plan whose numbers don't remotely add up
A New York Times poll of six swing states shows the progressive candidates faring worse against President Trump than comparatively moderate Joe Biden.
Warren says it’s not a tax. But what else would you call a requirement that employers send money to the federal government to finance a public program?
Twitter has made a bad decision when it comes to banning political ads from its site. They should trust users to decide what is right or wrong.
Bashing the rich may be good politics, but it’s terrible economics.
A bachelor's degree isn't a prerequisite to a satisfying career—it's a costly way of signaling the fortitude to withstand suffering.
Warren says her wealth tax math "clearly" adds up. It doesn't.
Her refusal to answer a question about taxes isn’t just dodgy; it’s designed to mislead.
Fellow Democratic candidates took aim over how Warren plans to pay for all the "free" stuff she's promising, her policy in the Middle East, and her thoughts on Trump's Twitter account.