For 2020, Kansas Democrats are making some interesting changes to how they will have a say in he race for the Democratic nomination.
Amusing results, and a history lesson, in a new poll
With the Trump Administration continuing to stonewall investigations, the House of Representatives is seeking to ramp up the pressure.
America’s Newspaper of Record has decided the backlash isn’t worth it.
Is it really such a bad thing when a politician changes a long-help position on a political issue?
Protesters flooded the streets of Hong Kong on Sunday over proposed change to the city’s extradition laws.
Donald Trump has betrayed the legacy and the sacrifices of the soldiers who fought their way onto the beaches of Normandy.
Just a day before he is scheduled to arrive in the city for a State Visit, London’s Mayor is denouncing President Trump.
The transatlantic rejection of elite consensus that began with Brexit continues.
The cost of Trump’s trade policies are well beyond the cost of soy beans.
No, abolishing the EC would not turn farmers into serfs.
Theresa May has announced she is stepping down as leader of the Conservative Party as of June 7th, starting a process that will have her out of Downing Street withing the next two months or so.
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has been indicted on seventeen counts under the Espionage Act arising out of his role in the Chelsea Manning affair.
A new poll shows that roughly two-thirds of Americans, including a large number of Republicans, do not want to see Roe v. Wade overturned.
President Trump is reportedly planning to pardon several American servicemen convicted of war crimes, an action that would be an insult to everyone who has ever worn an American uniform.
Forget high language about constitutional prerogatives. This is about parties and elections.
Based on the early stages of the campaign for the 2020 Democratic Presidential nomination, it appears as though the party’s progressive wing has misread the signals being sent by the party’s voters.
As expected, the House Judiciary Committee voted yesterday on party lines to hold Attorney General William Barr in contempt for refusing to turn over a full copy of the Mueller Report
California is the latest state to try to force all Presidential candidates, including the President, to release their tax returns as a condition for getting on the ballot. It’s not at all clear that this is permitted under the Constitution.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell declared “case closed” on the Mueller Report and the Russia investigation. This is far from the truth.
More Madisonian musing on the current state of our constitutional order.
Back to Fed 51 and this moment in oversight: we have to remember what ambitions drive politicians.
With the apparent failure of the coup attempt in Venezuela, what happens next?
The ongoing apparent attempted coup in Venezuela is already leading to talk of American intervention in the event of a crackdown. That would be unwise and unjustified.
Emperor Akihito became the first Japanese Emperor to abdicate the throne in 200 years today.
The narrow loser of the Georgia governor’s race has left open the possibility of running for President.
Ballot measures across the country would deny access to those who refuse to release tax returns.
A Federal Court in Michigan has found several of that state’s Congressional and state legislative districts to have been subject to extreme partisan gerrymandering.
Counter-Intelligence officials are warning that Russia is preparing another election interference campaign for the 2020 election.
A law professor asks some interesting questions, but ultimately not the right ones.
Having lost to him, she’s an ineffective voice on the matter of Donald Trump.
The Vermont socialist likes to invent rights that don’t exist.
Sanders’ suggestion is not as outside democratic norms as one might think.
“We have to be careful in balancing big dreams and bold ideas with also recognizing that typically change happens in steps.”
Princeton historian Sean Wilentz lays to rest a pernicious idea propagated by . . . Princeton historian Sean Wilentz.
Oral argument hints that we may have a 5-4 ruling allowing state legislatures to continue stacking the deck.
Institutions matter. (No, seriously, they really, really matter).
Last November the state voted overwhelming to amend its constitution. The lawmakers they elected at the same time are sabotaging it.
Free expression sometimes enables horrible crimes. How does a free society deal with that tension?