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  • The New York Times Doesn’t Understand Kansas image

    The New York Times Doesn’t Understand Kansas

    We join the story of Kansas in January 2011, when former U.S. Senator Sam Brownback takes office as Kansas’ 46th Governor along with a Republican-controlled House (92 Rs and 33 Ds) and Senate (32 Rs and 8 Ds) to have his back. The Kansas economy, while far from being a catastrophe, had been underperforming for a long time. The unemployment rate was 6.8%.

  • Federal Decision Threatens Apple Smartphone Encryption image

    Federal Decision Threatens Apple Smartphone Encryption

    A decision from a federal United States Magistrate Judge seriously threatens smartphone encryption by requiring Apple to build a “backdoor” to the iPhone for the Federal Bureau of Investigation…

  • Like Beyoncé, San Francisco Is Right To Embrace Innovative Technologies Such As AirBnB image

    Like Beyoncé, San Francisco Is Right To Embrace Innovative Technologies Such As AirBnB

    Beyoncé’s Super Bowl halftime show delighted her supporters and football fans alike, and also ignited something of a firestorm in the tech world by posting pictures of her lodging for…

  • A Permanent Internet Tax Freedom Act image

    A Permanent Internet Tax Freedom Act

    It only took 18 painstaking years, but the Internet Tax Freedom Act (ITFA) is close to becoming a permanent reality. By an overwhelmingly bipartisan vote of 75-20, the U.S. Senate…

  • Nevada PUC Upholds Net Metering Changes image

    Nevada PUC Upholds Net Metering Changes

    An article that ran last week described what three states – Hawaii, Nevada and California – have done over the past few months to update their net metering programs.

  • Louisiana Governor Wants Higher Taxes image

    Louisiana Governor Wants Higher Taxes

    If the state had effective limits on spending, like those found in Colorado’s Taxpayer Bill of Rights, Louisiana would not be contending with a budget shortfall today.

  • Education and Workforce Director Testifies in Missouri about Education Savings Accounts image

    Education and Workforce Director Testifies in Missouri about Education Savings Accounts

    Putting parents back in charge of the direction of their children’s educations allows parents not only to send their students to the schools – public or private – that work best for them, but to actually design customized and flexible education experiences, including tuition, online classes, curricula, textbooks and workbooks, tutoring, and special education therapies, that are as varied as the children themselves. Instead of feeding a child into a system that must, necessarily, be designed around the “average” student, through an ESA program, parents can and have constructed individualized education pathways for their children which capitalize on their unique strengths and shore up their particular weaknesses. But although they are cutting-edge, ESAs are not brand-new or unstudied. As of today, five states – Arizona, Florida, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Nevada – have passed education savings account programs. If 2011 was labeled the “Year of School Choice”[i] by the Wall Street Journal, 2016 is likely to be the “Year of Education Savings Accounts.”

  • West Virginia Becomes the 26th Right-to-Work State image

    West Virginia Becomes the 26th Right-to-Work State

    Today, the West Virginia Legislature overrode Governor Tomblin’s veto to enact the state’s Right-to-Work law, making West Virginia the 26th state in the nation to do so. Because West…

  • Addressing West Virginia’s drug overdose problem image

    Addressing West Virginia’s drug overdose problem

    Death caused from drug overdose is reaching epidemic levels in communities across the country, with West Virginia ranking as one of the highest in the nation. According to a 2015…

  • More Evidence Raising the Minimum Wage Could Hurt More Than it Helps image

    More Evidence Raising the Minimum Wage Could Hurt More Than it Helps

    Broken promises are nothing new in politics, but the worst are those promises that actual hurt the very people whom the promises were intended to help. Increasing minimum wage is…

  • Mia Zhu image

    Mia Zhu

  • FDA Wants to Force You to Know How Many Calories You Eat image

    FDA Wants to Force You to Know How Many Calories You Eat

    Congress is considering legislation, the “Common Sense Nutrition Disclosure Act”, that would ease costly menu labeling requirements and give restaurants and other food retailers some much needed flexibility.

  • Robust IP Protections Enhance Competitiveness image

    Robust IP Protections Enhance Competitiveness

    The most prosperous nations in the world are also the ones that prioritize the protection of intellectual property (IP) the most. Here are the facts. Nations that protect ideas lead the world…

  • The Zika Threat image

    The Zika Threat

    While only 20 percent of those infected will experience symptoms from the Zika virus, there are serious consequences from contracting this infection for pregnant mothers and unborn children. It is known to cause birth defects, including microcephaly, which causes small heads and brain damage in infants.

  • Shannon Kleinsmith image

    Shannon Kleinsmith

  • ALEC Reaffirms Support for Article V Initiatives image

    ALEC Reaffirms Support for Article V Initiatives

    ALEC leadership reached out to both the U.S. House and Senate Committees on the Judiciary to reaffirm support for an Article V convention for proposing amendments as a way to…

  • State of the State: Illinois image

    State of the State: Illinois

    Given the severity of Illinois’ problems, now is the time for bold reform.

  • Testimony before the Federal Lands Action Group image

    Testimony before the Federal Lands Action Group

    The Environmental Implications of Federally Managed Lands in the West and Canadian Devolution Prepared by Karla Jones Director of the Task Force on International Relations and…

  • Louisiana Newspaper: Treat 17-Year-Old Suspects as Juveniles image

    Louisiana Newspaper: Treat 17-Year-Old Suspects as Juveniles

    The issue of presumptively treating 17-year-olds as adults in the criminal justice system has made headlines in Louisiana.  Currently, 41 states presumptively treat 17-year-olds as juveniles.  Louisiana remains one of…

  • Illinois: Reform Criminal Justice to Reform Spending image

    Illinois: Reform Criminal Justice to Reform Spending

    According to Article 1, Section 11 of The Illinois Constitution, criminal sentencing requires that “all penalties shall be determined both according to the seriousness of the offense and with the…