The administration launches one last frenzy of spending and regulating.
Probably not—and Roberts, Thomas and Alito already expressed disapproval in the 2014 Noel Canning case.
Our age of bizarre ideological conceits is reminiscent of ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes.’
Musk gives bad advice to Trump on financial policy-making.
The choice of Burgum and Wright means more domestic fossil-fuel production.
Putin responds to the President-elect’s call for restraint with a missile barrage.
She bails out Cuba and prepares to defy the Supreme Court.
He could sway Putin by mobilizing the $300 billion in Russian money frozen in Western banks.
His administration can use the ‘rule against pretext’ to rescind Biden’s wrongfully issued regulations.
Trump respects our independence. Biden tried to restrict it.
The left revered him until the Covid pandemic made his aversion to vaccines much more pertinent.
Democracy and sound economic policy are on the wane, and Lula is leading the way.
The party needs to find a way to hold Trump’s support among diverse working-class voters.
If all Ramaswamy and Musk can do is save a few billion dollars, it will be worth it.
From vaccines to GMO food, his views put him on the anti-business left.
Skeptics sneer, but the duo are serious about shrinking government.
Chicago’s Brandon Johnson gives up on a $300 billion property tax hike.
As the publisher’s trial resumes, is his jailing worth the cost to Xi?
Republicans since Reagan have said Latinos were conservative at heart. Now they are at the ballot box.
The U.S. homeownership rate was 64% in 1967, two years after the department opened. Now it’s . . . 64%.
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