Losers Bloomberg and Steyer Spent Millions. Stop Freaking Out About Money in Politics.
Michael Bloomberg spent at least $500 million in his bid for a Super Tuesday blitz. He came away with...American Samoa.
Michael Bloomberg spent at least $500 million in his bid for a Super Tuesday blitz. He came away with...American Samoa.
There was a deficit of debt talk at the conservative conference.
Instead of taking a little off the top, Trump needs to give farm subsidies a buzz cut.
"Absent policy changes, the federal government continues to face an unsustainable long-term fiscal path," America's top auditor warns. But is anyone listening?
Proponents always forget to figure in the costs.
Whisky has become collateral damage in a long-running spat between the U.S. and the E.U. over subsidies to airplane manufacturers.
The real resistance is made up of those who refuse to be governed by any of the wannabe rulers.
Maybe Rome needed to disintegrate before the West could grow wealthy.
Instead of $12.5 billion in new agriculture purchases exports to China this year, the USDA expects less than $4 billion.
When it comes to the trade deficit, policy wonks were right and the president was wrong.
Bloomberg says "We're not going to throw out capitalism"; Sanders isn't so sure.
Plus: China boots three reporters, megacities are getting a smaller share of growth than they used to, and Dems gather to debate in Las Vegas..
Plus: Virginia's assault weapon ban gets shot down, Trump's tariffs face new legal scrutiny, and why you don't want Amy Klobuchar on your bar trivia team
Stephen Moore and Gene Epstein debate whether or not President Trump's Chinese trade policy deserves broad public support.
Federal outlays per person have increased $1,441 since 2016, to a grand total of $14,652 per person.
Assembly Bill 5 forces many companies to reclassify contractors as employees.
It’s a testament to fiscal irresponsibility.
The New Hampshire polls have closed, and the businessman and math advocate is no longer a candidate for president.
The president’s plan calls for modest cuts made easy by unlikely growth.
And whether it balances at all depends on some creative accounting. Meanwhile, it proposes $2 billion in new spending on the border wall.
Plus: Josh Hawley's latest terrible idea, sex work divides NOW, Gary Johnson's 2020 endorsement, and more...
Stephen Moore and Gene Epstein debate whether or not President Trump's Chinese trade policy deserves broad public support.
Now those companies are asking state lawmakers to ban or cripple potential competition from car-sharing programs.
It’s all part of the international push by officials to monitor the public. You’re next.
The federal government is not a good steward of your money.
Assembly Bill 5 was designed to constrain the growth of the so-called gig economy. In practice, it's closing off opportunities
American manufacturing has been in a recession for the past year.
An interesting study on the effect of right-to-work laws on union members
The PRO Act would implement a veritable grab bag of policies that labor unions have been pushing Congress to pass for years. The House will vote on it this week.
Plus: A poppyseed muffin prompts the authorities to take a newborn baby, two-thirds of young voters support sex work decriminalization, and more...
The president likes things big, so that apparently applies to government budgets too.
The Tariff Man doubles down on bad economics.
Good luck with that.
A new report shows federal budget deficits pushing past $1 trillion for the next decade.
The internet has turned adult performers into media entrepreneurs.
In Greta Gerwig's new adaptation, Amy finally gets some credit but Jo's hustle gets short shrift.
E-Verify makes life harder on immigrants who want to work, but it doesn't make things better for anyone—-even those who want to see those immigrants leave.
The Breakthrough Institute's Ted Nordhaus urges Americans to reject both doomism and denialism.
Republicans might rue that mistake when Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders inherits Trump's beefed-up trade authority.
Discredited 18th-century economist Thomas Malthus still haunts the environmental debate.
Good news on the economic front.
What is the correct reward for the person who creates something that millions of people want badly enough to pay for it?
Trump's trade war has harmed the very industries and workers he aimed to help.
Plus: More from an impromptu Trump talk at Davos, how Kamala Harris handled California cop corruption, and more...