Secret Service May Get Even More Money After Failing To Protect Trump
Government agencies are expensive, incompetent, and overreaching. The Secret Service is no exception.
Government agencies are expensive, incompetent, and overreaching. The Secret Service is no exception.
Only Sens. Paul and Wyden are expected to vote "no" on Tuesday. Power to stop KOSA now resides with the House.
The candidate supports gun rights, wants to privatize government programs, and would radically reduce the number of federal employees.
"Documented Dreamers" continue to have to leave the country even though this is the only home many have ever known.
The candidate makes the case against the two-party system.
The economics of tariffs have not changed in the past eight years. Marco Rubio has.
"Today it is highly centralized, where a few people at the top control everything," the former five-term congressman tells Reason's Nick Gillespie.
Plus: Masking protesters, how Google Search got so bad, Columbia's anti-apartheid protests of the '80s, and more...
Banning companies for doing business with China is a bad path to start down.
"This bill would basically allow the government to institute a spy draft," warns head of the Freedom of the Press Foundation.
New language could make almost anybody with access to a WiFi router help the government snoop.
Vance's latest gambit is pretty nonsensical, intellectually embarrassing, and obviously self-serving. But that doesn't mean that it's not dangerous too.
Sen. Tim Scott introduced a bill Monday to block the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's action by invoking the Congressional Review Act.
Sens. Dick Durbin and J.D. Vance want to put the Federal Reserve in charge of credit card reward programs.
Democratic Party bosses in the Garden State say that a court order to design better ballots will make it harder to tell voters what to do.
The race to replace accused bribe-taker Sen. Bob Menendez could bring an end to one of the state's most egregious political practices.
Even if successful, the strategy demonstrates how little interest politicians have in standing for something, rather than against something else.
A change that promised to be a moderating influence on politics has instead made campaigns more vicious than ever.
Plus: A listener asks the editors for short quotes from fictional works that are representative of libertarian ideas.
Plus: Nuclear reactors, space firsts, Fani Willis' love life, Trump sneakers, and more...
The policy is a true budget buster and is ineffective in the long term.
Former Rep. Justin Amash says "the idea of introducing impeachment legislation suggests there's other people who will join you. Otherwise, it's just an exercise in futility."
If you’re going to set arbitrary prices for labor, why not shoot for the moon?
Plus: A listener asks if the state of Oregon’s policy on drug decriminalization should be viewed as a success.
Plus: Biden's sagging poll numbers, the Amazon Files, and more...
Plus: A listener asks if it should become the norm for all news outlets to require journalists to disclose their voting records.
Republicans and Democrats are using emotional manipulation to push an agenda of censorship.
Zyn pouches are a dramatically safer alternative to smoking.
Plus: Deepfakes of Biden, complaints of Californians, filters for aircrafts, and more...
Companies based outside the United States employ 7.9 million Americans. Foreign investment isn't something to be feared or blocked, but welcomed.
The senator used to know why the U.S. Steel/Nippon deal is nothing to fear.
Section 702 will continue until April, when Congress will have another shot at seriously reforming a program that desperately needs it.
Competing FISA Section 702 reauthorization bills will reach the House floor next week, Speaker Johnson says.
The White House cited the extraordinarily low recidivism rates among those released and the savings to taxpayers in its veto threat.
"Duty of care has worked in other areas," the senator said, "and it seems to fit decently well here in the AI model."
The bipartisan Government Surveillance Reform Act would stop a lot of warrantless surveillance as a condition for renewal of Section 702 authorities.
The Bureau of Prisons released more than 12,000 people on home confinement during the pandemic. Three years later, Republicans want to overturn a Justice Department rule allowing those still serving sentences to stay home.
Amtrak has historically received $2 billion in federal subsidies each year. Under Republicans' "draconian" cuts, they'd receive over $5 billion next year.
Why Article I's residence requirement applies to appointees.
Plus: A listener asks the editors to weigh in on a hypothetical executive order to establish an American Climate Corps.
The residence question is closer than it might appear.
Plus: Dianne Feinstein's replacement doesn't even live in California, New York's biblical floods, and more...
The late California senator always seemed to err on the side of more government power and less individual freedom.
The Senate is an incompetent laughingstock regardless of what its members wear.
Since Congress won't cut spending, an independent commission may be the only way to rein in the debt.
The lack of oversight and the general absence of a long-term vision is creating inefficiency, waste, and red ink as far as the eye can see.