Hollow Major Parties Preside Over a Politics of 'Fear and Loathing'
The Democrats and Republicans seem ripe for replacement. But how and by what?
The Democrats and Republicans seem ripe for replacement. But how and by what?
Ethics allegations have been raised against Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, and Sonia Sotomayor. Both sides have retreated into whataboutism.
Will the Beaver State join Maine and Alaska?
Voters deserve much of the blame for this unnecessary mess.
The post-liberal conservatives who disparage "right-liberalism" are unapologetic proponents of actual left-wing policies.
The political landscape doesn’t fit on a simple map.
Plus: What the editors hate most about the IRS and tax day
The country needs a political truce with devolved power.
Decentralizing power is better than trying to jam one vision down the throats of the unwilling.
After a century of Democratic mismanagement, Chicago is hemorrhaging population, catastrophically underfunding massive pension promises, and taxing the bejeebus out of its crime-scarred residents.
Are political breakups really as American as apple pie?
Nature's 2020 endorsement of Joe Biden changed no minds but did significantly undermine trust in science.
The surprising recent rise in partisan, racial, and gender differences in circuit judges following earlier opinions.
"The country is that divided," said one business owner. "We kind of want to be with our own people. We want to stick together."
Is breaking up the U.S. a good idea? Law professor F.H. Buckley and Libertarian Party activist Jonathan Casey debate.
Plus: Judge strikes down Super Bowl censorship law, report details how much inflation was driven by stimulus spending, and more...
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion of "Project Decentralized REVOLution" with Mises Caucus founder Michael Heise.
Justice Richard Bernstein said Pete Martel's hiring as clerk was unacceptable because "I'm intensely pro-law enforcement."
We asked the hot new artificial intelligence system to take four popular political quizzes. Guess what we found...
Plus: The editors briefly celebrate a noteworthy shake-up in the Senate.
We should appreciate anything that shakes the confidence of both major parties.
The journalist has taken a great deal of flack—from both sides.
A hobbled Congress isn’t a solution to our woes, but it’s a lot better than lawmakers set loose.
A cult following fails to attract voters dismayed by Democratic policies.
Join us Thursday at 1 p.m. E.T. for a livestream with the chair of the Libertarian National Committee to discuss the state of the party post-midterms.
Priscilla Villarreal found herself in a jail cell for publishing two routine stories. A federal court still can't decide what to do about that.
Even before his personal foibles became front-page news, the former football star was more like a caricature of a bad candidate.
Neither candidate in the crucially important Pennsylvania Senate race has made much of a positive case for his candidacy.
Supporting restraints on government only for your opponents is a recipe for continued conflict.
Democrats are in favor of reducing the power of government over property owners, while Republicans want bureaucrats to rule.
It's the superpolitical vs. everyone else.
The president’s Philadelphia “threats” speech gets thumbs-down from the public.
Plus: Backpage appeal hits the 9th Circuit today, E.U. petition would ban anyone born after 2010 from ever buying nicotine products, and more...
Cynical single-party gerrymandering contributes to and is driven by the hyperpartisanship that defines American politics right now.
We should be skeptical of some Democrats' newfound embrace of "freedom" until they abandon freedom-restricting policies.
Michigan's 3rd district has produced two consecutive freedom-oriented Republican lawmakers. Tuesday's results ensure that there won't be a third.
If election denial is an existential threat to the country, why are Democrats boosting John Gibbs?
The streaming platform has said gun- and abortion-related ads submitted by Democrats are too controversial to be aired.
Dave Smith discusses the libertarian case for and against breaking up the United States.
Plus: First-degree murder charges for the Illinois parade shooting suspect, breakthroughs in cloning technology, and more...
Trump's pandemic travel bans received vastly different media treatment than Biden's.
Ohio's supposed reforms left lawmakers in charge of the mapmaking process, and a gerrymandered map was the predictable result.
There are good reasons to think polls grossly exaggerate the number of Americans who support political violence.
California's leaders can take the recent rise in property crime seriously without repeating the same "tough on crime" mistakes of the past.
The octogenarian columnist has a lot to say about happiness and history in the United States.