The Battlefields of Cable
How cable TV transformed politics—and how politics transformed cable TV
How cable TV transformed politics—and how politics transformed cable TV
Sohrab Ahmari inadvertently gives even more reasons to reduce the power of the state.
On this one issue, the democratic socialist sounds a lot like a libertarian.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company cites regulatory costs and a lack of skilled workers as specific impediments. Biden and Congress can fix those without giving out billions of taxpayer dollars.
It's a familiar program. And it will result in higher prices, slower growth, and fewer jobs.
An examination of French firms associates labor regulations with lower innovation and consumer welfare.
The White House insists it doesn't want to ban gas stoves but still needs the power to do so.
The Fiscal Responsibility Act falls well short of solving America's permitting crisis.
A bill that would expand wine sales in the Empire State is meeting familiar resistance from entrenched interests.
The North Carolina–based biotech startup Pairwise will begin selling genetically modified and better-tasting mustard greens.
"The greatest thing that ever happened to me was to be born in a free country of modest means and to have opportunities," says the Nobel Prize–winning economist.
Other states would do well to enact similar reforms.
Excessive government interference in the market hurts consumers and thwarts policy goals. It also gets in the way of the government itself.
While the US Supreme Court continues to require judges to defer to administrative agencies' interpretations of law in many situations, numerous states have abolished or severely curbed such deference. The results should temper both hopes and fears associated with ending judicial deference to agencies.
The state will fast-track applicants who have out-of-state credentials or experience.
By legalizing homebrewing, Carter laid important groundwork for the entrepreneurs and investors who are the true heroes of the craft-brewing revolution.
A Netflix documentary series blames the SEC for missing the Ponzi scheme and then calls for giving the SEC more power.
Cannabis consumers should have the same commercial leisure spaces that alcohol drinkers do.
The airline will either clean up its act or go out of business. Meanwhile, the government plods along.
Ohio might be on the verge of making home distilling legal—but federal law will still prohibit it.
While not a cure-all, universal recognition reduces the costs and time commitments of mandated training.
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.
Deregulated states may spend more on transmission, but that part of the market is still heavily regulated.
The mysteries of the mind are harder to unravel than psychiatrists pretend.
Reformers had two years of unprecedented victories—and then protectionists started using scare tactics to block them
Deregulation can help the millions of people who prefer flexible, independent jobs.
With the FORMULA Act soon to expire, the U.S. baby formula market is about to return to the conditions that left it so vulnerable to a shortage in the first place.
Fixing federal permitting rules and easing immigration policies would help companies like the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, which are interested in building more plants in America.
Alcohol-related ballot measures were in play in several states last week. The results were lukewarm.
From immigration to drug reform, there is plenty of potential for productive compromise.
The administration's draft regulations expand and complicate who the federal government considers an "employee."
Businesses are all in favor of competition, tax cuts, and deregulation only until they aren't—meaning only until subsidies might benefit them.
The West Virginia senator had proposed a series of exceedingly modest tweaks designed to speed up the yearslong environmental review process for new energy projects.
Government should not penalize investment, thwart competition, discourage innovation and work, or obstruct production.
California's cities require developers to include a minimum number of parking spaces in their projects, regardless of whether those spaces are in demand. A state bill would change that.
Bedford's New Hope Christian Fellowship Church argues in a lawsuit that the town is applying uniquely restrictive rules to its religious gatherings.
The West Virginia senator conditioned his support for the Inflation Reduction Act on reforming federal environmental review laws. His Senate colleagues don't seem so hot on the idea.
The West Virginia senator proposes marginal reforms to a federal permitting process that policy wonks say needs a root-and-branch overhaul.
Liz Truss promises a tax-cutting, deregulatory model for Britain.
It may now require notice and comment to rescind final rules that were never published in the Federal Register.
Atlanta, Sioux Center, and too many other cities and towns are still treating food trucks like second-class businesses.
If approved, the drug could increase access to effective birth control.
The agency is now taking small steps to allow foreign formula manufacturers to import their goods into the U.S.
What was once a classic Silicon Valley success story has become the victim of an intensely ideological war on nicotine.
The mayor's 'City of Yes' initiative would peel back regulations on everything from dancing in bars to all-studio apartment buildings.
Research on the effects of Oregon's loosening of its self-service gas ban finds that allowing adults to pump their own gas increases supply and lowers prices.
The Pine Tree State is embracing California-style housing reforms. It could run into California-style problems.