National Review
The state and local tax deduction for corporations should be repealed in exchange for pro-growth corporate tax reform.
On knowing Tony Dolan, my secret source back in the day.
‘Resistance’ reruns are all the rage, but are they working?
Only a moral drunkard could twist the Purim story of self-preservation to impugn Israel.
The latest chapter provides more hurdles for both Trump’s top-down and bottom-up efforts to bring the federal bureaucracy to heel.
My needlessly difficult attempt, while in Europe, to verify a Zuckerberg quote about Biden-era pressure.
Plus: Is the Department of Education on the ropes?
On the U.S.–Canada turmoil, stock-market politics, a scandal in Norway, ballerinas and food, W. B. Yeats, and more.
Chase’s decision to drop discrimination based on politics and religion is good for business.
Building on its previous efforts, the current Trump administration has the opportunity to implement a policy that balances cost savings with care.
The Empire is a manifesto opposing the most corrupt, childish film genre.
It is darkly amusing to see people who view electric cars as vital to the planet’s future attack the most successful electric brand in the country.
There’s a reason why the government should not be in the endorsement business.
The president has to make a choice.
The actress is a proud Israeli Jew, and she doesn’t care that some people have a problem with that.
The FreeCons have a long way to go from where they are now to where they wish to go next.
What we know about the negotiations suggests that there was never a deal on the table that would have left Ukraine secure from Russian conquest.
Kaley Chiles’s challenge to Colorado’s efforts to censor her counseling conversations with her clients is a chance for the Court to stem a dangerous trend.
The restoration is a technical triumph, but the cathedral is as much Gothic Revival as Gothic.
It will require Republicans recognizing that they need Democratic votes, and Democrats acting responsibly.
Let’s lower the stakes by asking less from the Fed. Price stability is enough.
Five years later, the architects of the Covid Era’s lockdown insanity deserve only our contempt.
Yes, President Trump can fire, and has fired, Hampton Dellinger.
The owner received threats and disturbing sexual comments, but also plenty of support.
Second terms are often messy affairs, but the wheels are coming off this one far too early.
Fascism fascination for gamers.
Something so momentous will be hard to forget. And it shouldn’t be forgotten.
Those on the right who make excuses for Tate aren’t just fooling themselves. They’re threatening young women and misleading young men.
Those hoping for a Reagan-era-like return to economic sanity or regulatory humility in antitrust at the Federal Trade Commission should prepare for disappointment.
None of this is good for U.S. business.
On a nation’s struggle and agony; the nature of democracy; Trump vs. Canada; and more.
The week of March 3, 2025: Funding Europe’s NATO gap, tariffs, industrial policy, the congestion tax, and much, much more.
The big argument is only just beginning.
The public wants the economy humming, the border secure, and an end to woke lunacy — not tariffs and irrelevant indulgences.
Thank you to Senators Paul, McConnell, and Budd for voting against the worst Republican labor secretary of our lifetime.
The cutoff is a gift to Russia. A reversal can’t come soon enough.
Housing male inmates in women’s prisons and jails — which he has supported — is a nightmarish transgender policy.
Opposition to DOGE is driving Democrats to reject legislation to recover stolen pandemic unemployment benefits.
When it comes to European tech policy, just say no.
This is an important test case for the administration.
Bringing back Karl Rove’s hero won’t usher in a new economic golden age.
DOGE isn’t going to stave off or bring on the end times.
Republican officials can’t afford to forget that the families that vote for them care about the whole basket of issues.
On the supremely silly comments about the Court and its justices.
Chamberlain fought bravely to preserve the Union. Mills now fights to preserve her state’s refusal to keep men out of women’s sports.
A little spring cleaning of the budget wouldn’t hurt.
It would be the fastest way to make America healthy again.
The party is casting about for a workable political strategy. Scenery-chewing isn’t it.
It is not a procedural formality — it is the most effective defense against an expansive federal government.
We’ve grown used to the heckling.
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