Social Security and Medicare Cuts Are Coming, Whether Politicians Do It or Not
As legislators refuse to act, benefits will be cut without any possibility of sheltering those seniors who are poor.
As legislators refuse to act, benefits will be cut without any possibility of sheltering those seniors who are poor.
Is she an heir to Trump's throne? Is she a second coming for the pre-Trump Republican establishment? She doesn't even seem to know.
Legislators will increasingly argue over how to spend a diminishing discretionary budget while overall spending simultaneously explodes.
Biden's speech offered plenty of opportunity to present a counter-narrative to continued taxes and spending. Instead Sanders went a different direction.
These days, he may run for president. His politics have changed.
A big part of Trump's appeal in 2016 was his forthright opposition to military interventionism. His record in office didn't match the rhetoric.
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The last of the reelection campaign's defamation lawsuits against media outlets looks like it is headed for defeat, like all the others.
The Florida governor wants to fund more migrant stunts, despite claiming that his budget will “keep more money in the pockets of Floridians.”
But it doesn't have to be the future of the GOP or the country.
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If you look closely, you'll find a lot of contradictions.
In 1950, there were more than 16 workers for every beneficiary. In 2035, that ratio will be only 2.3 workers per retiree.
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are still the chief drivers of our future debt. But Republicans aren't touching them.
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While some Republicans may have had misguided motivations, a few disrupted McCarthy's campaign in order to enact fiscal restraint. Their colleagues were fine with business as usual.
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Kevin McCarthy's pick to lead the House Foreign Affairs Committee evades any post-Trump humbleness in foreign policy.
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Plus: a lightning round recollection of comical political fabulists
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The outgoing Nebraska senator thinks America's true divide is between pluralists and zealots.
Justice Richard Bernstein said Pete Martel's hiring as clerk was unacceptable because "I'm intensely pro-law enforcement."
This week's Republican revolt against Kevin McCarthy is actually a rank-and-file revolt against the top-down process that both parties have used to control the House in recent years.
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The paper attributes the fight over the election of the next House speaker to "anti-establishment fervor" and a lust for "personal power."
The former Libertarian congressman was in the Capitol Wednesday drumming up a Hail Mary quest to become speaker of the House.
For most aid critics, the urge to cut off Kyiv appears unconnected to any sort of principled realism, non-interventionism, or even isolationism.
But partisans are having the wrong debate.
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The insurgent Republicans want to balance the budget, impose new barriers to immigration, and increase transparency for future earmark spending.
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If lawmakers keep spending like they are, and if the Fed backs down from taming inflation, then the government may create a perfect storm.
When I was young, I assumed government would lift people out of poverty. But those policies often do more harm than good.
The massive power of federal government attracts frauds.
After two terms in the Senate as a champion for free markets and limited government, Pennsylvania's Republican senator is heading into retirement.
Unfortunately, the reality is something far more sinister.
The Congressional Budget Office projects that future deficits will explode. But there's a way out.
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Elon Musk reignited the GOP’s interest to bring charges against Anthony Fauci.
We asked the hot new artificial intelligence system to take four popular political quizzes. Guess what we found...
The GOP will get what it deserves if, as predicted, Trump burns down the party if he doesn’t get the 2024 nomination.
The Supreme Court said in 1942 that local activity, not just interstate activity, was subject to congressional regulation.
It's especially outrageous when considering the billions of dollars in fraud that took place thanks to COVID-19 relief programs.
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And most of them quietly slunk away afterwards.
What's happening right now in Cochise County, Arizona, should make the passage of the Electoral Count Reform Act even more urgent.