Online Sports Betting Giants Place Their Bets Against Growing Rivals
Online sports betting companies are using the same legal playbook that once threatened their operations to eliminate competitors.
Online sports betting companies are using the same legal playbook that once threatened their operations to eliminate competitors.
Instead of searching for gentle execution methods, states should just stop killing prisoners.
A lawsuit from the Institute for Justice claims the law violates the Louisiana Constitution.
An AP survey found that most states have no mechanism to appeal denials of records requests, outside of filing a lawsuit.
"Laws like this don't solve the problems they try to address but only make them worse," says a Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression attorney.
The proposal would harm business owners, consumers, and workers without much benefit in return.
Censorship of 2,872 Pennsylvania license plates raises free speech questions.
The charter school movement has seen many recent Supreme Court victories widening their scope to faith-based education, but some ambiguities remain.
In California, which has a slew of renewable energy regulations, the cost of electricity increased three times faster than in the rest of the U.S.—and the state still doesn't even get reliable energy.
A law forcing kids off social media sites is still likely coming to Florida.
Virginia’s barrier crime law limits employment prospects for ex-offenders, who often find their way back into the penal system when they can’t find work.
The Beehive State joins a growing wave of defiance aimed at Washington, D.C.
Gov. Gavin Newsom's response to allegations of favoritism only serve to underline how the entire fast food minimum wage law was a giveaway to his buddies.
Schools were already staffed at record levels even before COVID-19, when enrollment fell by nearly 1.3 million students.
Probably because Greg Flynn, who operates 24 of the bakery cafes in California, is a longtime friend of Gov. Gavin Newsom.
A federal judge in an ongoing case called the porn age-check scheme unconstitutional. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton doesn't seem to care.
"Governors don't get to print money," the former Arizona governor tells Reason.
The market has created a lot of dog-free housing for a reason. A bill from Assemblymember Matt Haney would destroy it.
"The people who violated the governor's mandates and orders should face some consequences," a Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board member said in 2022.
State Supreme Court Chief Justice Tom Parker cited the Bible to explain why.
The Supreme Court supposedly put an end to “home equity theft” last year. But some state and local governments have found a loophole.
Copper Peak revitalization was pitched as an economic development project for the Upper Peninsula, which already has two working ski jumps.
Smokestack-chasing is out. A diversified economy based on environmental protection is in. But will it work?
By definition, people assigned bail have been judged safe to release into the general population. Requiring them to post cash bail is needlessly punitive.
Throughout Republican-run Western states, lawmakers are passing legislation that treats adults as if they are children.
The credits cost the state over $1.3 billion per year with a 19 percent return on investment. Lawmakers' proposals will do little to change that.
The bill, which has thankfully been withdrawn, was an unnecessary state intrusion into Coloradans' lives.
AI tools churning out images of fake IDs could help people get around online age-check laws.
Several large public universities are getting multimillion dollar budget cuts.
The tax credits currently rank as the largest subsidy in state history.
Plus: A listener asks if libertarians are too obsessed with economic growth.
"Why isn't there a toilet here? I just don't get it. Nobody does," one resident told The New York Times last week. "It's yet another example of the city that can't."
The proposal seems to conflict with a Supreme Court ruling against laws that criminalize mere possession of obscene material.
Undocumented immigrants aren’t the same as an invading army, but the Texas governor keeps acting like they are.
Kenneth Eugene Smith was likely the first person in the world to be executed by nitrogen hypoxia.
It's taxpayers who lose when politicians give gifts, grants, and loans to private companies.
It is not the job of Florida taxpayers to support state officials' preferred presidential candidates.
A new bill would impose a $20,000 annual sales cap, which would make the state’s cottage food regime one of the most restrictive in the nation.
In an amicus brief filed in Murthy v. Missouri, they ignore basic tenets of First Amendment law in order to quash online speech they don't like.
A veto from Gov. Katie Hobbs killed a bill that would’ve brought the trade above ground. Now lawmakers have launched a new legalization effort.
How much public money will be used remains unclear. The consensus answer seems to be "a lot."
Gavin Newsom supported a ballot initiative to legalize recreational marijuana in California but rejected a social consumption measure.
The clients get a confusing maze and a lot of incentives to stay on welfare.
The statistic, compiled by watchdog group Good Jobs First, only takes into account "megadeals" involving at least $50 million in subsidies.
Republican senators say the change is "mind-bending and deeply concerning."