Ballot Disqualification: The Stakes
James Craven and Patrick G. Eddington Just three days after the Supreme Court lifted a lower court injunction that blocked federal agents from cutting
James Craven and Patrick G. Eddington Just three days after the Supreme Court lifted a lower court injunction that blocked federal agents from cutting
Patrick G. Eddington If government bureaucrats are internally describing the civil society organization you work for as “vexsome,” it’s a good sign you and
Thomas A. Berry and Nathaniel Lawson Chief Justice John Marshall famously stated in Marbury v. Madison (1803) that “[i]t is emphatically the province and
Jeffrey A. Singer Three years after its first‐in‐the‐nation drug decriminalization measure (Measure 110) went into effect, Oregon’s lawmakers are poised to re‐criminalize possessing
David J. Bier A bipartisan group of senators has introduced a new immigration bill (“Border Act”) backed by the White House. The bill is
David Kemp and Peter Van Doren One year ago, a freight train derailed in East Palestine, Ohio causing a leak of hazardous chemicals and a large
Neal McCluskey Usually, when you simplify something, it gets easier. But not when you are the federal government, and not when it comes
Jeffrey A. Singer Last weekend, Senate negotiators announced a bipartisan compromise on a supplemental spending package that will create tougher immigration and asylum laws aimed at
Romina Boccia and Dominik Lett Congress designated $12 trillion as emergency spending over the last 30 years, according to our recent policy analysis. That’s
Walter Olson Donald Trump’s ongoing claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him occupy a curious position in our current political discourse.