States now have a reason to root out fraud, enforce work requirements.
Editorials
Thanks to Gov. Joe Lombardo and President Donald Trump, Nevada parents will soon have new educational options.
It’s much easier to romanticize Hamas when you ignore their brutality. That wasn’t an option for Yair Horn.
Judge Jessica Peterson “manifestly abused” her discretion.
Strange bedfellows ignore the potential ramifications.
Instead of letting these audit reports collect dust, district leaders need to earn their pay and ensure school leaders have fixed the issues identified.
“The data,” The Wall Street Journal reported, “adds to evidence that a labor market whose strength was already fading could actually be on its way to weakness.”
Free money makes people less likely to work. If common sense doesn’t convince you of that, a new study should.
There’s a time and a place for Mr. Trump to criticize Mr. Biden’s foreign policy record. That’s certainly fair game. But this was neither.
The problem is that the concept of “misinformation” has ballooned well beyond verifiably false statements and become mired in disputes over opinions and interpretations of facts.
Mr. Biden picked himself up off the curb on Monday long enough to unveil a plan to end lifetime tenure for justices and to allow Congress to become involved in enforcing a code of ethics for those on the court.
“I don’t know if you’ve ever been to hell before,” Las Vegas motorist Kevin Speakman told the Review-Journal, “but that’s how I would describe it.”
Good news. Las Vegas is surrounded by empty land that could be developed except for one thing: The federal government “owns” most of it.
The great Democratic reset has launched to much enthusiasm among progressives and their numerous media stenographers. The Republican retool has been a mixed bag.
The benefits of such film subsidies are consistently oversold by star-struck politicians parading under the banner of economic development.
