Vivek Ramaswamy: Is There a Libertarian-Nationalist Alliance?
The former presidential candidate discusses the ideological tensions within the America First movement.
The former presidential candidate discusses the ideological tensions within the America First movement.
Plus: Iranian Trump plot, Newsom's stand against parental rights, Biden tries SCOTUS term limits, and more...
"I don’t care to replace a left-wing nanny state with a right-wing nanny state," the onetime presidential hopeful said this week.
Two years post-takeover, some longtime activists and donors claim the Mises Caucus has driven the party into the ground.
Vivek Ramaswamy isn't the first to advocate this badly wrong idea. But there's still no good justification for it.
He says the two ideas "are not in tension with one another." He's wrong.
Plus: A listener asks the editors if there are any bad laws that might discourage people from having kids.
There were times when he seemed like the only person in the field willing to speak some impolitic truth. But he mixed those truths with some of the most godawful positions you could imagine.
The fourth-place GOP presidential candidate asserts the existence of "clear evidence" of "entrapment," without providing any.
Plus: Austin and Salt Lake City pass very different "middle housing" reforms, Democrats in Congress want to ban hedge fund–owned rental housing, and a look at GOP presidential candidate's housing policy positions.
Plus: Grimes the urbanist, Matt Taibbi's fight night, crazy AI applications, and more...
The former South Carolina governor can't decide whether she likes corporate subsidies or opposes them on principle.
Formerly fringe immigration policies have gone mainstream in the Republican Party.
The 2024 GOP candidate has proposed something blatantly unconstitutional.
Plus: A listener asks the editors why the Libertarian Party waits until election year to nominate its presidential candidate.
"Land use restrictions are constricting the supply of housing," said Ramaswamy at tonight's GOP presidential debate in Miami.
Being against cancel culture requires consistency.
Trump is still a runaway favorite, even when using a vote-counting technique that's meant to make it more difficult for unpopular candidates to win elections.
Plus: A listener asks the editors to weigh in on a hypothetical executive order to establish an American Climate Corps.
The Republican presidential candidate ignores the lethal impact of the drug policies he avidly supports.
Plus: "Every time I hear you, I feel a little bit dumber," nuclear-powered AI, North Korea, and more...
It’s highly unlikely that it would pass constitutional muster.
Plus: A listener question about the continued absurdity of sports stadium subsidies
In last night's Republican presidential debate, candidates floated various forms of military action against drug cartels.
Only Vivek Ramaswamy and Gov. Ron DeSantis said they wouldn't support additional aid to Ukraine. But both argued we should be more militarily engaged against China and Mexico.
The surging candidate, a political unknown, articulated a foreign policy that was somewhat more libertarian than his rivals.
Accusing competitors of being "super PAC puppets," just asking questions about conspiracies, and lying about the media is all of the same successful populist piece.
At best, tonight's debate is a glorified preseason football game—an unwatchable spectacle that no one ought to enjoy.
A report reveals new draconian restrictions the 2024 frontrunner wants to implement, such as sea blockades in Latin America and "ideological screening" for migrants.
A Republican-sponsored resolution would authorize the president to "use all necessary and appropriate force" against foreigners involved in fentanyl trafficking.
Presidential contender Tim Scott, who announced recently, says he will use "the world's greatest military to fight these terrorists" south of the border. He's not alone.
Why the businessman launched a long shot campaign for the presidency.
The GOP nominee can forge a humbler path on foreign policy—or turn back to failed neoconservatism.
The Capitalist Punishment author explains his America First 2.0 agenda, how to fix America's identity crisis, and why he no longer calls himself a libertarian.
Join Reason on YouTube Thursday at 1 p.m. ET for a discussion about Ramaswamy's run for the presidency and the agenda laid out in his book Woke, Inc.
While a conservative skepticism toward military aggression would be welcome, Republican standard-bearers are all too happy to sign off on war powers in other ways.
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