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Social Media Companies Need Better Emergency Protocols
Social media companies should develop emergency protocols to counter the exploitation by malign agents and states that seek to foment violence. -
Rational Security: The 'So Not-Nice They Impeached Him Twice' Edition
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Necessary and Insufficient: The Problems Impeachment Does Not Solve
The bipartisan impeachment vote is an important and necessary step. But it fits President Trump’s final days only awkwardly. -
The Cyberlaw Podcast: China and the CIA: A Wilderness of Mirror Imaging
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Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion -
The Lawfare Podcast: Late Impeachments
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Supreme Court Hears Oral Argument in Collins v. Mnuchin
On Dec. 9, the Supreme Court heard a challenge to the constitutionality of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The case may determine Congress’s ability to limit the president’s removal power. -
The Coronavirus Games: A Geopolitical Spy Story
Around the world, spies are being used to respond to the pandemic by collecting information and equipment, engaging in information warfare, and exploiting contact-tracing platforms. -
Assessing the Vulnerabilities Equities Process, Three Years After the VEP Charter
The government has failed to deliver on its promises of greater transparency. -
The National Security Law Podcast: The Biggest Fiasco of Them All
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Document: Article of Impeachment and House Judiciary Report
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Today's Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion -
The Originalist Presidency in Practice?
A review of Saikrishna Bangalore Prakash's "The Living Presidency: An Originalist Argument Against Its Ever-Expanding Powers" (Harvard University Press 2020) -
About That Presidential Medal of Freedom: Revisiting the Nunes Memo
Yes, Devin Nunes got some things right. But his famous memo also contained blatant and intentional falsehoods, and even its truths were in service of a larger lie. -
Summary: Supreme Court Oral Argument in Federal Republic of Germany v. Philipp
Does the “expropriation exception” of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) afford U.S. courts jurisdiction to resolve claims brought by German citizens against the German government? -
Summary: Supreme Court Oral Argument in Hungary v. Simon
Can courts abstain from hearing suits against foreign sovereigns for reasons of international comity, even when the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA) has provided the court jurisdiction over the su... -
The Lawfare Podcast: The Incredible Vanishing President
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Lawfare Live: Seditious Conspiracy, Impeachment and the Inauguration
This Friday, Jan. 15 at 1pm, members of the Lawfare team will take questions about crimes related to the Capitol Hill riot, impeachment and the inauguration. -
What to Make of the Facebook Oversight Board’s Inaugural Docket
It’s useful to take a close look at what cases the board has agreed to take on so far, and to try to tease out what it might be trying to accomplish. -
Trump’s War on the U.S. Agency for Global Media
How the presidentially appointed CEO of the federal media agency hijacked his agency for the president’s political purposes.
More Articles
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Mixed Signals on Alleged Alien Enemies
The Supreme Court insists on due process but offers no specifics and leaves hundreds in a Salvadoran prison with no remedy. -
Energy Dept. Instructs Employees to Gather Info on Deals with Law Firms
Emails obtained by Lawfare reveal that DOE instructed employees to gather information on business dealings between contractors and law firms. -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, April 11
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump.