Most states want to woo new businesses. California Gov. Gavin Newsom is trying the opposite approach.
Editorials
Ending subsidies will make the industry stronger.
The dangerous progressive education fad of “equitable grading” infiltrated the Clark County School District a few years back.
Move over, Golden Knights and Las Vegas Aces. Southern Nevada has a new champion to celebrate.
The Fourth Amendment safeguards one of our most cherished freedoms: the sanctity of the home. Potent and succinct, it is a bulwark against tyranny.
The Department of Veterans Affairs continually fails to fire bad employees.
If you’re a young worker looking to gain experience, or the parent of a teenager whom you hope will get off the couch in this or subsequent summers, you recently got the best possible news: there might actually be jobs available.
While Sen. Bernie Sanders’ supporters have worked tirelessly (and quite successfully) to convince their fellow Americans to “Feel the Bern,” they might very well be the ones feeling burned when the Democratic Party selects its presidential nominee.
Proponents of minimum wage increases like to tell us that wage boosts are crucial for the nation’s working poor, but evidence continues to mount that they actually harm those they are supposed to help. Consider the recent news about Wal-Mart.
Public support for the legalization of marijuana is on the rise. According to a recent Gallup poll, 58 percent of Americans think it should be legalized.
Presidential candidates on both sides of the aisle want to lift the lower and middle classes. But to join the middle class, you must have a good job. And an elevated minimum wage prices the unskilled out of the job market, delaying or denying young people an entrance to the workforce.
For decades, federal agencies have been been plagued by inefficiency, incompetence and even illegal activity.