August 24, 2023The Times After Sugar-Rush Stimulus Failed to Hit the Spot, We Should All Be Supply-Siders NowNobody today, in good conscience, can thus claim that the UK’s growth problem is caused by too little demand.By Ryan Bourne
August 15, 2023The Dispatch Will Donald Trump Attack the Legitimacy of the Supreme Court?He’s mostly directed his outrage at lower-court judges, but his calculus could change over the next year.By Walter Olson
August 11, 2023National Review Freedom Conservatism vs. National-Debt Conservatism?Freedom conservatives take the debt problem seriously. National conservatives do not.By Ryan Bourne
August 11, 2023Reason Hunter Biden and Donald Trump Should Both Have Jury TrialsEnd the government’s plea-bargaining racket with open and adversarial jury trials.By Clark Neily
August 10, 2023The Times Government Debt Is a Historic Problem, but This Time the Issue Really Is DifferentUnfortunately, policymakers in America and Britain remain too sanguine about the tail risks of fiscal crises.By Ryan Bourne
August 9, 2023The Dispatch Elon Musk Says He’ll ‘Fund Your Legal Bill.’ Should He?Promoting meritless lawsuits might be legal, but it’s still wrong.By Walter Olson
July 31, 2023Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Primary ProblemBy reforming a broken electoral system, Arkansas can ensure every voice is heard and every vote counts.By Andy Craig
July 26, 2023The Dispatch Natcons, Freecons, and the Centrality of the StateDueling manifestos present two very different visions for America—and its government.By Scott Lincicome
July 20, 2023The Hill (Online) Now More than Ever, Americans Should Defend LiberalismEconomic reality doesn’t generally appeal to either left or right these days.By David Boaz
July 18, 2023The Dispatch Sorting out the Kinks in Ranked-Choice VotingArlington, Virginia, is pausing its experiment, but that’s not an indictment of the practice.By Walter Olson
July 7, 2023The Hill (Online) Missing the Big Picture: The Senate’s January 6, 2021 ‘Intelligence Failure’ ReportJan. 6 was not an intelligence failure, but a total breakdown of political and social norms built up over nearly 250 years.By Patrick G. Eddington
July 3, 2023Lawfare Ten Years After Coup, the U.S. Still Supports Tyranny in EgyptBiden promised to end the “blank checks” given to Egypt’s dictator under the Trump administration. That has not happened.By Jon Hoffman
June 29, 2023The Times ‘Greedy’ Firms Aren’t to Blame for Inflation, Whatever the IMF May SayThe best version of this story goes that the pandemic and Ukraine war made supply-chain woes and rising energy costs salient with the public.By Ryan Bourne
June 22, 2023The Times Brexit Can’t Be Blamed for Britain’s High InflationIn focusing on Brexit as an inflation source, we risk trivialising the bigger story.By Ryan Bourne
June 21, 2023Orange County Register Central Valley Subsidence and Flooding Are the Next Threat to High-Speed RailThis year’s rainy season has raised a new threat to the California high-speed rail project’s construction schedule: flooding.By Marc Joffe