If you need a reason for optimism about the future of the country, here’s one. More and more states are embracing universal school choice.
Victor Joecks
Victor Joecks is a Review-Journal columnist who explores and explains policy issues three days a week in the Opinion section. Previously he served as the executive vice president of the Nevada Policy Research Institute. Victor is also a staff sergeant in Nevada National Guard. Originally from Washington state, Victor received his bachelor’s degree from Hillsdale College.
Jesus Jara wore the mantle of responsibility but lacked the power to make substantial changes without the union’s blessing.
Clark County School District superintendent Jesus Jara has laid the groundwork for his own dismissal
Ending homelessness in Nevada isn’t a complicated. It requires political will.
If Gov. Joe Lombardo gets his way, the nation won’t have to wait for days to find out the winner of close elections in Nevada.
Reducing the prison population is a counterproductive response to surging crime. But that’s what Nevada’s been doing.
The Las Vegas housing market bears a concerning resemblance to Humpty Dumpty.
If you support taking away opportunities from female athletes, you should be in favor of the Equal Rights Amendment.
Even the world’s most well-known creator of electric vehicles thinks the world needs more gasoline.
A group that criticized more police in schools is now upset about school violence. Don’t expect them to realize the connection between those two things.
If DeSantis decides to jump in the race, he has a path to winning to nomination, regardless of what Trump does.
The public may one day regard renewable energy mandates with the same fury and disdain as “defund the police.”
Squishy legislative Republicans just pulled off an embarrassing twofer. They helped Democrats pass bad policy that hurts the GOP politically.
Nevada’s education establishment wants to raise your property taxes — by a lot. Then, it wants you to pay more in sales tax.
The debate over elected versus appointed school board members misses the point. School board dysfunction isn’t the primary cause of the Clark County School District’s problems.