In this week’s Washington Examiner, I reviewed Ilya Shapiro’s new and timely book, Supreme Disorder: Judicial Nominations and the Politics of America’s Highest Court.
Worst debate’s best tweets
StandardI collected the best tweets of last night’s awful debate, today at The Federalist.
Pence has the power
StandardDon’t believe the latest wish-casting from the legal academy: Vice Presidents can cast tie-breaking votes on judicial nominations. Read my article about it at The Federalist.
Philadelphia Turns Back to the Bad Old Days
StandardMy latest column at Broad + Liberty is about the homeless encampment on the Ben Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia, and how it represents a return to the city’s unsafe, lawless past.
The most important election ever, again
StandardIn this week’s Washington Examiner, I reviewed Michael Anton’s The Stakes, a book about the choices we face in the 2020 election.
Signs of the times
StandardTwo new pieces from me this week:
*At Broad+Liberty, I wrote about the escalating lawn-sign wars and what it means for neighborly relations.
*In The Federalist, I wrote about how Kamala Harris’s nomination cements the rise of money and the decline of workers as the ruler of the Democratic Party.
Mind your business
StandardSay no to pollsters and make the secret ballot a secret again. My latest at The Federalist.
McGirt and the Rule of Law
StandardTextualism is correct not because it is conservative or liberal, but because it is true. I wrote about McGirt v. Oklahoma and the rule of law, today at The Federalist.
50 is enough
StandardRioting in the capital shows why the federal government needs to control its own environs and why D.C. should not become a state. My latest at The Federalist.
Regulating social media
StandardWhat’s to be done about social media monopolies? I wrote about it in the latest edition of the Washington Examiner.