Gavin Newsom Defends Federalism Against Trump's Unilateral National Guard Deployment
In a federal lawsuit, California's governor argues that the president's assertion of control over "the State's militia" is illegal and unconstitutional.
In a federal lawsuit, California's governor argues that the president's assertion of control over "the State's militia" is illegal and unconstitutional.
Trump and the right are living out their fantasies of rewriting the awful summer of 2020.
There are now initial contributions by Andy Craig, Tarnell Brown, Aaron Ross Powell, Jonathan Blanks, and myself, plus response essays.
Plus: RFK Jr. tackles vaccine advisory board, menswear influencer might be deportable, and more...
Trump's domestic use of the military to counter anti-deportation protests in LA is so far very limited. But that could change. A big part of the root of the problem is the lawless behavior of federal immigation-enforcement agencies.
Neither Russia nor Ukraine has a clear path to victory. The Ukrainian drone attack last week and the Russian air raids on Friday don't change that.
The State Department is eliminating the CARE office and ending the Enduring Welcome program, stranding U.S. allies who risked their lives and were told America would protect them.
In 1968, the feds thought that the boxing champion—and future grill salesman—could be a potent weapon against the left.
Fusionism holds that virtue and liberty are mutually reinforcing, and that neither is possible in any lasting or meaningful way without the other.
Democrats keep trying to out-hawk Republicans, even though the mood in America has shifted toward diplomacy.
Plus: Harvey Milk was kind of libertarian, deporting Zohran, public schools shy away from transparency, and more...
Military families have long chosen homeschooling at twice the rate of the general population.
When anyone can have an air force, superpowers aren't as powerful as they used to be.
The brief was filed on behalf of the Brennan Center, the Cato Institute, law-of-war scholar Prof. John Dehn, and myself.
The real case for free trade is not "my enemies hate it" or "it's cheaper for me, personally" but "it makes the world richer, freer, and more peaceful."
Hawks in Washington often make it sound hard to end conflicts with other countries, but the United States and Syria are fixing relations overnight.
"New opportunities for innovation, economic growth, and global engagement," says one expert.
Reagan's budget chief warns that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act could balloon the national debt to $60 trillion, risking a catastrophic bond market crisis.
The Pulitzer Prize–winning author discusses the enduring roots of Middle Eastern conflict, the rise and fall of cultural panics, and why Texas may be the blueprint—and battleground—for America's future.
Giving the Defense Department even more taxpayer money is a recipe for waste, not security.
Diplomacy is better than war in Ukraine, Gaza, and Iran. But that doesn't mean it's easy.
Lifting TPS status would make them eligible for deportation to Afghanistan, where the Taliban is likely to persecute and punish them.
The debate over free trade should include more than the costs of Trump's tariffs versus the value of cheaper stuff.
Legal scholar Rebecca Ingber offers some strong arguments against deference in this context.
Plus: NYC can't build a damn park, violence against diplomats, worrying news from Anthropic, and more...
To protect America, maybe what we really need to fund is more Tom Cruise.
Reason heard from a minister in the new Syrian government about the Trump administration's outreach.
In a 2-1 ruling, the Court ruled Trump's invocation of the Alien Enemies Act cannot supersede a settlement barring deportation of a group of migrants. One judge also held the AEA was invoked illegally.
"We did a lot of field studies and got nothing to show for it," said one U.S. Naval Radiological Defense Laboratory researcher.
The Administration isn't wrong to admit white South African migrants. But it is wrong to exclude all other refugees, including many fleeing far worse discrimination and oppression.
In a badly flawed decision, a federal district court ruled that Trump can invoke the AEA because the Tren de Aragua drug gang's activities amount to a "predatory incursion."
The president’s speech in Saudi Arabia promised a new course for U.S. policy in the Middle East. Can he deliver?
Afghans who fled Taliban rule with hopes of U.S. resettlement now face detention, extortion, and forced return.
The site of George Washington's famed winter encampment might not have existed without colonial-era iron regulations.
Sitting on the sidelines let America play neutral mediator and talk down both sides.
Some players like the game to mimic the real world. Others like to play as Gandhi but nuke their enemies into oblivion.
Residents of the United Kingdom will get lower tariffs, while Americans are stuck paying higher ones.
The right number of dolls? As many as your kid wants.
We don't need more of the same. We need evidence of a serious turnaround.
The pendulum within Trump’s Middle East policy has swung back toward deal making, for now.
Tariffs on creative media are barriers not just to goods, but also to ideas.
The Southern District of New York rules Trump invoked the Act illegally, because there is no "invasion" or "predatory incursion."
"I've been very vocal about congressional authority under a Democratic president or now under a Republican president," the Washington state congresswoman tells Reason.
The president wants to develop the F-47 fighter jet 60 years before the F-35 is scheduled to retire.
Sex toys, blenders, baby strollers, microwaves, hair dryers, and other affordable goods that Americans take for granted could soon be in short supply.
Plus: Alcatraz reopening, Bukele corruption scandal, assisted suicide, and more...
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