Weighing Kamala Harris' Veep Options
A very special Reason Roundtable crossover episode with two guests from The Dispatch!
A very special Reason Roundtable crossover episode with two guests from The Dispatch!
Untangling the roots of Vance's odd political evolution.
The former presidential candidate discusses the ideological tensions within the America First movement.
People making the same income should be paying the same level of taxes no matter how they choose to live their lives.
Plus: DSA takes on the Venezuelan election, Israel kills Hamas leader, and more...
Plus: Venezuelan election follow-up, racial segregation is back (for Kamala), and more...
Plus: A listener asks the editors about Project 2025.
Donald Trump's running mate has discovered the most politically toxic way to demand the status quo.
Plus: Vance's anti-Trump emails, Venezuelan elections, toxic masculinity discourse, and more...
The controversy over Vance's advocacy of higher tax rates for childless adults illustrates the power of framing.
The New Right talks a big populist game, but their policies hurt the people they're supposed to help.
Despite the party’s alleged turn against regime change wars, Pompeo’s stab-in-the-back myth has Republicans convinced that the same policy will work this time.
He showed he's the boss of the GOP and that Joe Biden and the Democrats need to raise their game.
Reason's Zach Weissmueller talked with Trump supporters at the Republican National Convention about heated rhetoric, the weaponization of government, and plans for unity.
Yes, J.D. Vance likes J.R.R. Tolkien. So do most people.
Fox News commentator Mary Katharine Ham discusses Trump's new policy agenda.
Vance's vibes are Trumpian but also traditional—a potent and dangerous combination.
If voting was the solution to the ills of America's working class, wouldn't it have worked by now?
Trump’s supporters tried to sell “peace through strength”—and war for “generations to come.”
Despite flirting with “America First” realism and restraint, the Republican ticket is all-in on the forever wars.
Republicans and Democrats have both managed to get worse on housing policy in the past week.
We're looking at four more years of anti-tech and anti-business antics from the FTC no matter who wins this November.
The high-profile fight with UPS didn't improve working conditions as much as O'Brien promised.
Trumpism, not Reaganism, is the doctrine of the Grand Old Party for the foreseeable future.
Plus: Classified documents case dismissed, 1968 all over again, venture capitalists finally get representation, and more...
The Ohio Senator is one of the Party's leading advocates of protectionism, economic planning, and immigration restrictions.
The Ohio senator has clear authoritarian tendencies.
Biden's bullseye comment was no more dangerous than Sarah Palin's crosshairs.
"I don’t care to replace a left-wing nanny state with a right-wing nanny state," the onetime presidential hopeful said this week.
Sens. J.D. Vance and Marco Rubio—unlike Gov. Doug Burgum—have proven that they will move the GOP away from free market economics.
Plus: Ozempic's potential, AOC shilling for Biden, "toxic masculinity" discourse, and more...
Plus: unpermitted ADUs in San Jose, Sen. J.D. Vance's mass deportation plan for housing affordability, and the California Coastal Commission's anti-housing record.
Vance thinks that jobs lost because of incompetent central planning don't matter—but that jobs lost to immigrants do.
Donald Trump's acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller advocated the plan this week, which Trump later called a "ridiculous idea."
Plus: Hunter Biden is guilty of crimes that shouldn't be crimes, North Dakota's voters take on gerontocracy, and more...
Let there be no confusion: The Libertarian Party overwhelmingly rejects Trump.
The close Trump ally tried to argue that more aggressive U.S. policy in the Middle East would help the U.S. get out of the Middle East.
Vance's latest gambit is pretty nonsensical, intellectually embarrassing, and obviously self-serving. But that doesn't mean that it's not dangerous too.
Sens. Dick Durbin and J.D. Vance want to put the Federal Reserve in charge of credit card reward programs.
Even if successful, the strategy demonstrates how little interest politicians have in standing for something, rather than against something else.
Plus: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is fooled by TikTok housing falsehoods, Austin building boom cuts prices, and Sacramento does the socialist version of "homeless homesteading."
Both companies consented to the deal. Why should they have to get permission from the president to do business?
It could also outlaw any sort of sexualized image, play, or performance, pornographic or not.
Companies based outside the United States employ 7.9 million Americans. Foreign investment isn't something to be feared or blocked, but welcomed.
Another round of federal intervention to prevent its sale makes no sense.
The senator used to know why the U.S. Steel/Nippon deal is nothing to fear.