The ticketing monopoly may have messed with the wrong group of millions of rabid fans.
Money, Politics, and Power
We Already Have Laws to Stop Crypto Fraud
Forget Washington’s urgency to design a regulatory regime for crypto. It’s better to treat it like any other illegal operation.
The Biden Administration Does Not Need Another Wall Street Adviser
The White House is considering a finance recruit whose career has been directly at odds with all of President Biden’s accomplishments.
Inflation, Supply Chain Woes, and Elaine Chao’s Culpability
Democrats in general and Mayor Pete in particular should have highlighted the disastrous hands-off approach of Trump’s transportation secretary.
The Week Corporate Power Started to Dissipate
Aggressive antitrust enforcement is starting to notch some victories.
From Countervailing to Prevailing Power
Progressives should plan our fights against anti-democratic oligarchies with the explicit aim of becoming the dominant political force.
The Crime Wave That Republicans Defend
Corporate theft and fraud is not only tolerated by the GOP, it’s shielded. Yet Democrats rarely use this to attack Republican messaging on crime.
Crypto PAC Questionnaire Claims Bitcoin Mining Is Good for the Environment
A rare glimpse at how PACs communicate with candidates reveals the types of ideas policymakers are pressured into believing.
The Unlikely Origins of the Chamber-Chopra War
Big business could soon get their chance to kill the CFPB for good, thanks in part to former Obama aide William Daley.
How Manchin Capitalized on Being at the Center of the IRA Debate
The senator formed a new fundraising vehicle that lets him solicit larger contribution checks.

