A French court’s banning of the populist candidate from presidential elections for five years may have the opposite effect of its apparent intention.

A federal judge has shut down the corruption case against New York’s mayor, setting up a potential showdown between Adams, Andrew Cuomo, and Zohran Mamdani.

It contributes to universities’ left-wing bent.

A policy push for domestic manufacturing risks boondoggles.

Scrapping the EPA’s draconian tailpipe-emissions rule will boost competition, benefit consumers, and strengthen national security.

State lawmakers should act before the April 1 budget deadline.

Two emerging NYCHA developments point the way toward a reimagination of public housing.

Mayor Daniel Lurie has moved the city away from its disastrous “harm reduction” model.

Lawsuits against websites based on the ADA are common because lawyers can get a quick monetary settlement if they find any issues.

Mayor Adams’s accountability plan is a good start.

In a 7-2 decision last week, the Court upheld the Biden administration’s regulations.

The Left’s splintering violence threatens a veto over democratic power.

From blocking drug screenings for newborns to limiting child-abuse investigations, the New York assemblyman's policies would endanger at-risk kids.

They function as a form of indirect affirmative action.

Federal terrorism law may not be the best tool to hold them accountable. The states should step in.

Its meritless countersuit against a respected law professor is proof that DEI’s grip on higher education won’t loosen without a fight.

The socialist candidate is surging because he’s talking about the right issue. It’s his solutions that are the problem.

Though New York City planners want to live in the world of Jane Jacobs, they plan around the physical legacy of the master builder.

The campus diversity regime, at the Ivy League school and elsewhere, won’t go down without a fight.

A new book looks at nations’ ability to wield the global economic system against political adversaries.

Scrapping the EPA’s draconian tailpipe-emissions rule will boost competition, benefit consumers, and strengthen national security.

State lawmakers should act before the April 1 budget deadline.

Two emerging NYCHA developments point the way toward a reimagination of public housing.

Mayor Daniel Lurie has moved the city away from its disastrous “harm reduction” model.

Lawsuits against websites based on the ADA are common because lawyers can get a quick monetary settlement if they find any issues.

Mayor Adams’s accountability plan is a good start.

In a 7-2 decision last week, the Court upheld the Biden administration’s regulations.

The Left’s splintering violence threatens a veto over democratic power.

From blocking drug screenings for newborns to limiting child-abuse investigations, the New York assemblyman's policies would endanger at-risk kids.

They function as a form of indirect affirmative action.

Federal terrorism law may not be the best tool to hold them accountable. The states should step in.

Its meritless countersuit against a respected law professor is proof that DEI’s grip on higher education won’t loosen without a fight.

The socialist candidate is surging because he’s talking about the right issue. It’s his solutions that are the problem.

Though New York City planners want to live in the world of Jane Jacobs, they plan around the physical legacy of the master builder.

The campus diversity regime, at the Ivy League school and elsewhere, won’t go down without a fight.

A new book looks at nations’ ability to wield the global economic system against political adversaries.

Scrapping the EPA’s draconian tailpipe-emissions rule will boost competition, benefit consumers, and strengthen national security.

State lawmakers should act before the April 1 budget deadline.

Two emerging NYCHA developments point the way toward a reimagination of public housing.

Mayor Daniel Lurie has moved the city away from its disastrous “harm reduction” model.

From City Journal’s Symposium Series
A symposium on anti-Semitism in the United States

Proposals to reinvigorate American dynamism, innovation, and self-sufficiency

Proposals for reversing America’s criminal-justice decline

A symposium on restoring the principle of color blindness

Proposals to improve care for the seriously mentally ill

A symposium on higher education in the United States

A symposium on anti-Semitism in the United States

Proposals to reinvigorate American dynamism, innovation, and self-sufficiency

Proposals for reversing America’s criminal-justice decline

A symposium on restoring the principle of color blindness

Proposals to improve care for the seriously mentally ill

A symposium on higher education in the United States

A symposium on anti-Semitism in the United States

Proposals to reinvigorate American dynamism, innovation, and self-sufficiency

Proposals for reversing America’s criminal-justice decline

A symposium on restoring the principle of color blindness


Podcasts
City Journal’s 10 Blocks podcast features rich conversations on public policy and culture with host Brian C. Anderson.
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10 Blocks podcast




10 Blocks podcast

The Spotlight
Mounting liabilities are the greatest threat to the city’s survival.

Corporatist progressivism and the crisis of American higher education

How a Washington public school’s transgender secrecy policies drove an immigrant family out of the country

Enlightened as we believe ourselves to be, a golden age of contentment has not dawned—very far from it.

Students would scorn free speech less if colleges honored their mission to transmit knowledge.

Looking back at college basketball’s first great scandal, which dethroned the game from its place atop New York sports.

After the pandemic, Americans should never let public-health authorities deprive them of their liberties.

Surrounding the City of Light are threatening Cities of Darkness.

A decade after his death, one of our greatest literary stylists has fallen into critical disfavor.

The pandemic may prove as bad as some warn; it is also possible that our response could prove as harmful as the virus itself.

A venerable Catholic school in the Bronx has transformed the lives of generations of low-income, at-risk students.

Mounting liabilities are the greatest threat to the city’s survival.

Corporatist progressivism and the crisis of American higher education

How a Washington public school’s transgender secrecy policies drove an immigrant family out of the country

Enlightened as we believe ourselves to be, a golden age of contentment has not dawned—very far from it.

Students would scorn free speech less if colleges honored their mission to transmit knowledge.

Looking back at college basketball’s first great scandal, which dethroned the game from its place atop New York sports.

After the pandemic, Americans should never let public-health authorities deprive them of their liberties.

Surrounding the City of Light are threatening Cities of Darkness.

A decade after his death, one of our greatest literary stylists has fallen into critical disfavor.

The pandemic may prove as bad as some warn; it is also possible that our response could prove as harmful as the virus itself.

A venerable Catholic school in the Bronx has transformed the lives of generations of low-income, at-risk students.

Mounting liabilities are the greatest threat to the city’s survival.

Corporatist progressivism and the crisis of American higher education

How a Washington public school’s transgender secrecy policies drove an immigrant family out of the country
