Proposed New York City Hotel Regulation Threatens To Push Prices Even Higher
With prices skyrocketing, the city is weighing whether to regulate hotels further by barring them from hiring contracted workers.
With prices skyrocketing, the city is weighing whether to regulate hotels further by barring them from hiring contracted workers.
Growth of regulation slowed under former President Trump, but it still increased.
The high-profile fight with UPS didn't improve working conditions as much as O'Brien promised.
The co-founder of Whole Foods discusses his new memoir, The Whole Story: Adventures in Love, Life, and Capitalism as he launches his new holistic health venture, Love.Life.
Government school advocates say competition "takes money away" from government schools. That is a lie.
Many have seen their hours reduced—or have lost their jobs entirely.
In practice, police unions' primary responsibility seems to be shielding officers from accountability and defending their conduct no matter what.
It isn't about stopping crime—it's about protecting a favored constituency's jobs.
The First Amendment applies even to the CEOs of successful companies, but the NLRB seems to disagree.
Private unions have every right to exist, but that doesn't mean they're actually beneficial on net.
A similar law in California had disastrous consequences.
Requiring two-person crews on freight trains wouldn't have prevented the East Palestine disaster. It's simply a giveaway to Biden's labor union allies.
Support for industrial policy and protectionism are supposed to help the working class. Instead, these ideas elevate the already privileged.
Much-desired flexibility for gig workers is in jeopardy.
President Javier Milei's adversaries are wealthy Argentines who have benefited from government largesse.
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.
Biden's economic policies gave us three years of excessive, wasteful, and poorly targeted federal spending.
Biden's economic policies gave us three years of excessive, wasteful, and poorly targeted federal spending.
Milei's swift action intended to transform Argentina's floundering economy provoked the country's biggest labor union to call tens of thousands to protest in Buenos Aires against his libertarian agenda.
"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."
Plus: Deepfakes of Biden, complaints of Californians, filters for aircrafts, and more...
That's bad news for Americans.
The president says the changes are needed to "avoid disaster."
The good news: Regulators have exercised unusual restraint.
President Joe Biden's support for the United Auto Workers might have harmed his push for a faster transition to electric vehicles.
The regulation is part of a suite of new restrictions on hotels sought by the local hotel workers union.
American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten misses a pretty big reason why families are leaving traditional public schools.
A new joint employer rule from the NLRB threatens to fundamentally change the business relationship between a franchise and its parent company.
A plan to have the state take control of Maine's two private electric utility firms has divided the political left.
The world's largest union of pilots says this requirement is necessary for safety and not unduly burdensome, but its data are misleadingly cherry-picked.
The president voiced support for the union's goals on the picket line but companies are already struggling to build fuel-efficient cars that Biden wants to prioritize.
Plus: Minimum wage laws, space exploration, that time when North Africa was less dysfunctional than California, and more...
Less than 1 percent of American workers are union members in manufacturing jobs. But you'd never know that by watching our politics.
Plus: A listener asks whether younger generations are capable of passing reforms to entitlement spending.
Plus: IRS insanity, robocop photo ops, and more...
"He said, you strike, you're fired. Simple concept to me. To the extent that we can use that once again, absolutely."
Labor actions largely respond to policies that cause widespread pain.
Stacy Davis Gates, the president of the Chicago Teachers Union, previously said school choice is for "racists."
Plus: Trump criticizes abortion bans, new TikTok trend asks how often men think about the Roman Empire, and more…
Instead, Donald Trump is proposing a 10-percent automatic tariff on all imports, a trade policy even worse than Biden's.
Plus: GOP hopefuls debate tonight, Canadian link tax backfires, and more...
The former Cheers producer explains why the studios are failing, the writers and actors are missing the big picture, and creators fear their audience.
The Labor Department is officially undoing changes made to help combat inflation in the 1980s.
Better policing could solve the police-recruiting crisis.
Join Reason on YouTube Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion about the Hollywood strikes with television writer and political commentator Rob Long.