It hits inboxes every Friday morning at 6:30 a.m. ET. and it’s your one-stop shop for our take on American politics, the culture, and the world at large.
Unhappy with the Supreme Court’s rulings against New Deal legislation, President Franklin D. Roosevelt announces a plan to expand the Court to as many as 15 justices. On the pretext that ...
When it comes to arguments for international trade restrictions,’ writes Sowell, ‘most of the arguments are fallacious most of the time.’ ...
President Trump spoke loudly and swung a big stick in Panama’s direction, and it produced instantaneous results when Secretary of State Marco Rubio visited the small Central American nation.
USAID instructed staffers not to show up for work on Monday after Musk’s DOGE team closed the agency’s headquarters.
Trump’s Tariff Folly The Stakes of Trump’s Executive Branch Shake-Up He is taking steps to block J6 defendants from state employment. As Rich Lowry and I have discussed on our podcast, I believe it ...
The president is also considering hefty new tariffs on the European Union and on specific goods, such as oil and gas, at a later date.
In a separate memo, the Defense Intelligence Agency paused celebrations of Black History Month and ten other ‘special observances.’ ...
Lawmakers approved a $447 million statewide publicly funded school voucher program last week, with the 23-page bill easily passing in the Republican controlled senate (20–13) and house (54–44).
But his graduate student union championed the cause in emails and on social media, offering to help members facing university discipline. The union also committed itself to the BDS (boycott, ...
Law and order in Mexico is probably one of the greatest economic and humanitarian goods that policymakers could reasonably achieve with vision and effort.
The unsuitable nominees are obviously trying to backpedal just enough to get confirmed without any true change in their worldviews.