The Trump Administration Seriously Considered Unilaterally Suspending the Writ of Habeas Corpus
The proposal was nixed only after White House Staff Secretary Will Scharf explained why it was legally dubious.
The proposal was nixed only after White House Staff Secretary Will Scharf explained why it was legally dubious.
Instead of making the case for war in Venezuela, Iran, and Cuba, the White House has been digging up conflicts from long ago.
The federal government slashed the annual cap of refugee intake to the United States by 94 percent last year.
The president himself portrayed Renée Good and Alex Pretti as would-be murderers, and he did not seem troubled by the homeland security secretary's slander of them.
Miller says he’s waging a war for America. Americans see a brutal war on them.
How are the Millers going to defend Western civilization if they don't know the name of its defining philosophy?
Polar War demonstrates how difficult it is for armies to operate in the high north—and just how far America is behind Europe in Arctic warfare.
Presidents should try to nudge the world toward more trade and less war whenever possible. Trump is doing the opposite.
Speeches by the president, Stephen Miller, and Tucker Carlson will accelerate dislike of the president’s agenda.
The president is torn between the economic concerns of his supporters and the demands of immigration hardliners.
A new push to end work programs for international students will drive away skilled graduates and restrict U.S. innovation.
The Kentucky senator is also not a big fan of military parades, populist economics, or shredding due process.
Stephen Miller's trial balloon about abrogating habeas corpus in immigration cases shows how any libertarian with pragmatic intelligence should reject so-called "libertarian" arguments for strict immigration laws.
Stephen Miller's understanding of the Constitution is dubious for several reasons.
The journalist joins the show to discuss due process, immigration enforcement, and the growing tensions between the courts and the executive branch.
No, the Supreme Court did not give Trump free rein in the case of a wrongly deported man.
An administration staffed by Stephen Miller, Thomas Homan, and Kristi Noem will be punitive and authoritarian on this issue.
Plus: A listener question concerning the key to a libertarian future—should we reshape current systems or rely upon technological exits like bitcoin and encryption?
While other pandemic policies have ended, the migration measure has “outlived [its] shelf life,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote yesterday.
Title 42 prevents migrants from legally seeking asylum in the United States.
Just about everyone—conservatives, progressives, libertarians—should be glad to say goodbye to this cruel approach to immigration policy.
A new dump of emails shed light on Miller's agenda and motivations
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