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The Fight to Free Evan
On March 29, 2023, Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich was arrested in Russia on bogus espionage charges. He remains imprisoned in Moscow-a political hostage in his parents' homeland. Inside the struggle to bring him home
The Nepo State
Tammy Murphy, the First Lady of New Jersey, is leveraging her husband’s power to lock up the democratic nomination for senate. She appears unstoppable.
What Does the Working Class Really Want?
Vying for the support of a multiracial working-class coalition, neither Democrats nor Republicans are focusing on the crucial question.
A Military Loyal to Trump
If Donald Trump wins the next election, he will attempt to turn the men and women of the United States armed forces into praetorians loyal not to the Constitution, but only to him. This project will likely be among his administration's highest priorities. It will not be easy: The overwhelming majority of America's service people are professionals and patriots. I know this from teaching senior officers for 25 years at the Naval War College. As president, Trump came to understand it too, when he found that "his generals” were not, in fact, mere employees of a Trump property.
A Plan to Outlaw Abortion Everywhere
The year 2022 was a triumphant one for the anti-abortion movement. After half a century, the Supreme Court did what had once seemed impossible when it overturned Roe v. Wade, stripping Americans of the constitutional right to terminate a pregnancy.
America Will Abandon NATO
"I don't give a shit about NATO." Thus did former President Donald Trump once express his feelings about America's oldest and strongest military alliance. Not that this statement, made in the presence of John Bolton, the national security adviser at the time, came as a surprise.
The Revenge Presidency
For all its marvelous creativity, the human imagination often fails when turned to the future. It is blunted, perhaps, by a craving for the familiar.
Who Gets to Protest at Columbia?
What led the university to suspend pro-Palestinian student groups.
A Hamas Leader's Last Stand
Mohammed Deif, the elusive figure who heads hHamas' military operations, is Israel's most wanted man
She Just Had a Baby. Soon, She'll Start Seventh Grade
In post-dobbs America, some girls can go out of state to get an abortion. This is the story of one who couldn't
A Pennsylvania Prophet
Meet the Christian nationalists who want to assert dominion-starting with the Keystone State.
"I'm Not Turming the Other Cheek Any More"
Radicals took over the Michigan GOP. Now they can't stop losing.
The Long Run
Maryland's governor Wes Moore is a former Rhodes Scholar and paratrooper inspiring great expectations. His message? Service will save us.
From Ecuador to the 7 Train
As the city's migrant population surges, some of the youngest spend their days selling candy underground.
The Mayor Talks a Good Game
Can Eric Adams get by on bluster alone?
What Is Justice for You?
After police violence, the state protects cops. Survivors have to protect each other.
Presidential Timbre
I watched Hillary Clinton get within steps of the White House. Gretchen Whitmer could go all the way
The Florida Project
Strongman Governor Ron DeSantis transformed the Sunshine State. Can he sell his blueprint to the nation?
Looking for Unity to Fight Loneliness
Senator Christopher Murphy wants a national discussion about social isolation and says it is an issue Democrats and Republicans can agree on
'The Whiteboard Lady' Makes Her Move
Rep. Katie Porter is making a bid for the Senate seat Dianne Feinstein will be leaving. To win, she'll have to stand out in a crowded progressive field
Can Imran Khan Make a Comeback?
Pakistan's most popular politician is under attack-and vying for power once more
The Inside Game: Gabriel Debenedetti
Gavin newsom isn’t supposed to be doing this the Feinstein dilemma looms over the wannabe face of Democrats.
TikTok Goes From Silly to Serious
“Most sectors of the economy are a conspiracy between the big incumbents and their punitive regulators,” venture capitalist and software engineer Marc Andreessen tells Reason this month (page 48). Asked to identify pockets of relative freedom and competition, he offers what he calls “the cynical answer”: There’s still innovation “in the spaces that don’t matter. Anybody can bring a new toy to market. Anybody can open a restaurant.”
Adrienne Harris
When Harris took over the New York Department of Financial Services, she inherited an agency known for its groundbreaking crypto regulation. She oversaw crypto's meltdown with an even hand, cracking down on alleged bad actors while granting firms new licenses. It's all part of a complex juggling act: She must make sure her tactics-including recent actions to avert a banking crisis-also grow the state economy.
A Successful Challenge to a Ban on 'aiding and Abetting' Abortion
When the city of Lebanon banned abortion in 2021, it initially seemed like a pointless stunt.
Gen Z in the House
A week with Maxwell Frost, the youngest new member of Congress
America's Future is at Sea
The nation is ceding the seas to its enemies. It's not too late to avoid catastrophe.
The New Anarchy
America faces a type of extremist violence it does not know how to stop.
The French Are in a Panic Over Le Wokisme
The nation's vehement rejection of identity politics made me recalibrate my own views about woke ideology.
A Different Drum
Maxwell Frost, the youngest member of Congress, is marching to his own beat.