Trump Promises To Get Rid of Bad Regulations. Can He Deliver?
Growth of regulation slowed under former President Trump, but it still increased.
Growth of regulation slowed under former President Trump, but it still increased.
We could grow our way out of our debt burden if politicians would limit spending increases to just below America's average yearly economic growth. But they won't even do that.
Plus: New York refreshes rent control, AOC and Bernie Sanders call for more, greener public housing, and California's "builder's remedy" wins big in court.
A plan to have the state take control of Maine's two private electric utility firms has divided the political left.
We already have a party that's committed to progressive ideals, do we really need another?
The city wanted to bring in more money, in part for early childhood education. But such taxes are disproportionately paid by the poor.
Progressives like Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders typically blame corporate greed for higher prices. When prices go down, does this mean they should credit corporate benevolence?
The rapper is a Bernie Sanders supporter who speaks out about gun rights and free speech.
The proposal would raise the federal minimum wage by 134 percent.
"All the time we hear socialists say, 'Next time, we'll get it right.' How many next times do you get?"
Even taking all the money from every billionaire wouldn't cover our coming bankruptcy.
The U.S. tax system is extremely progressive, even compared to European countries—whose governments rely on taxing the middle class.
Hawley might call them "tariffs on China," but that's obvious nonsense: Tariffs are paid by Americans.
The ideology champions the same tired policies that big government types predictably propose whenever they see something they don't like.
The outspoken critic of the CDC and FDA explains what went wrong—and what went right—with COVID policy.
If lawmakers keep spending like they are, and if the Fed backs down from taming inflation, then the government may create a perfect storm.
Faced with White House opposition, Sanders withdrew a resolution that would've challenged U.S. involvement in the Yemeni Civil War.
Punditry ought to be less important than wonkery.
If climate change is an emergency that requires immediate action, it makes sense to streamline environmental reviews that tangle green energy projects in red tape.
Sanders' frequent cries for heavy-handed federal government intervention should be opposed whenever they crop up.
Top-notch health care, delivered fast and for low cost, really isn’t on the government's menu.
Billionaires are better at figuring out what to do with their money than the government will ever be.
Wealth tax proponents claim only super rich people would be affected. But to raise the revenue Warren, Sanders, and Biden want, they'd have to tax the "working rich"—doctors, lawyers, and other hardworking high earners.
"Multi-billionaires like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson are off taking joyrides on their rocket ships to outer space. They are buying $500 million superyachts."
The former Texas congressman and presidential candidate says his goal was to get people to think about freedom.
Our political and media elites should think twice before they swarm social media like Russian tanks driving deep into Ukraine.
Elizabeth Warren's bizarre theories about corporate greed driving inflation have made their way into federal law enforcement, it seems.
The New York congresswoman has endorsed much-needed zoning reform, but also raised typical NIMBY complaints about projects in her own backyard.
Plus: Civil war fantasies, a challenge to California's ban on felons becoming EMTs, and more...
Today's highly successful space race "is not something for two billionaires to be directing," says Sanders, who favors the government spending taxpayer money to do the same damn thing (but more slowly).
Removing the cap on the state and local tax deduction would be a massive tax break for wealthy Americans who choose to live in high-tax states.
The Senate's leading progressive seems to misunderstand the basic math of American democracy.
Under Biden, Democrats have decided that their agenda has no costs and no tradeoffs.
The two are idolizing the wrong models.
Plus: The FBI had at least a dozen informants helping put together the plot to kidnap Michigan's governor, price controls fail again, and more.
The bill is the most far-reaching recent proposal of its kind.
For many elected Democrats, infrastructure is much more than roads, bridges, dams, and waterways.
A third-generation Marxist critiques the contemporary left and discusses what progressives and libertarians might have in common.
And it has failed in almost every country where it's been tried.
"I don't think it is going to survive," Biden said on Sunday, though he promised to push for a higher minimum wage as a stand-alone bill in the future.
The reconciliation process exists for a reason. Discarding it for political expediency should be viewed with skepticism.
American companies would need relief from Democrats’ COVID relief efforts.
The strange alliance proves once again that the one thing politicians can agree on is spending taxpayers' money.
A new study finds that taxes on wealth reduce long-run GDP by 2.7 percent.
Plus: Laura Loomer's win, another hotel accused of sex trafficking, and more...
Is Bernie Sanders' mouth writing checks that Joe Biden's administration won't be able to cash?
An expansive new batch of policy proposals shows Biden moving toward a more expensive, more intrusive policy agenda.
Plus: "Obscene" cartoonist gets probation, U.S. teen births plummet, a reopening win in Ohio, and more...