Articles

Washington Examiner: Dems have a problem with the whole Bill of Rights

| Posted in Articles

Last Thursday, Democratic senators took control of the floor of the legislative chamber and spent nearly 15 hours discussing gun control. There’s nothing odd about this, except for the proposal they were insisting on. They hope to cross out the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution, and perhaps other amendments as well. The most charitable thing we can say about their latest gun proposal…

The Washington Post: Schools Leaving "No Child" Law Behind

| Posted in Articles
Tags: Education

With the passage of a federal education law that returns a significant amount of authority to the states, lawmakers and state school officials across the country are readying for an opportunity to reshape local education policies without the onerous requirements of No Child Left Behind. Signed into law last month, the Every Student Succeeds Act puts strict limits on federal influence…

National Review: The Controversy over Syrian Refugees Misses the Question We Should Be Asking

| Posted in Articles

The jihad waged by radical Islam rips at France from within. The two mass-murder attacks this year that finally induced President Francois Hollande to concede a state of war are only what we see. Unbound by any First Amendment, the French government exerts pressure on the media to suppress bad news. We do not hear much about the steady thrum of insurrection in the banlieues: the…

National Journal: 5 Things To Know About the Revised No Child Left Behind

| Posted in Articles

In the com­ing weeks, the House and Sen­ate will vote on a ma­jor over­haul of the fed­er­al edu­ca­tion law. The fi­nal text of the Every Stu­dent Suc­ceeds Act, de­signed to re­place No Child Left Be­hind, was re­leased Monday. If a bi­par­tis­an co­ali­tion of law­makers has its way, it will be headed for the pres­id­ent’s desk be­fore the end of the year. Next Amer­ica summed up a…

WSJ: No Child Left Behind’s Successor

| Posted in Articles
Tags: Education

Conservative reformers have had major successes, notably on welfare in 1996. But when a reform doesn’t turn out as hoped, they need to adapt. A case in point is No Child Left Behind, which the GOP Congress is now preparing to leave behind. This week the House plans to debate the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), which lapsed in 2007 and needs revision. A bipartisan…

The Weekly Standard: Growth and Inequality

| Posted in Articles

The economic recovery is barely worthy of the name, and there is evidence that inequality in America is increasing. Ignoring the first rule of statistics—correlation is not causation—progressives see this as a new reason to expand government. Reduce inequality and the growth rate will increase. But there is more assertion than fact in the claim that increased inequality results in…

The Federalist: Top Nine Myths About Trade Promotion Authority And The Trans-Pacific Partnership

| Posted in Articles

The Federalist: Top Nine Myths About Trade Promotion Authority And The Trans-Pacific Partnership By: Scott Lincicome June 9, 2015 The current debate over Trade Promotion Authority proves, once again, that the classic description of the anti-globalization movement—as “largely the well-intentioned but ill-informed being led around by the ill-intentioned and well informed”—still holds…

National Review Online: The SGR Fix Will Bust the Budget

| Posted in Articles

The House is expected to vote today on a bill to eliminate the annual cuts in Medicare payments to doctors that Congress has been postponing for more than a decade — the so-called “sustainable growth rate” (SGR) cuts. (UPDATE: The bill passed the House by a 392–37 margin.) The bill would result in $145 billion in new federal spending, above current law. It would also require wealthier…

Stay Connected

Use the form below to sign up for my newsletter and get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.