Pro-growth economic policies have a broad base of support among voters, even among rank-and-file Democrats – and all want the same thing.
Pittsburgh attracted a left-leaning group of techies who in the end couldn't make their city work - and other Pennsylvania voters know it.
California, with arguably some of the worst economic policies, passes George Gilder's Israel Test of knowing how to incubate genius.
Price controls never work as advertised, and those the government has placed on prescription medications have only raised their prices.
Appalachia can no longer attract big factories, but small businesses can thrive without subsidized boondoggles that pass for competition.
K12 Print is the latest success story in returning manufacturing to America and running a company as a community steward.
Americans, surveyed, clearly prefer equal opportunity and economic dynamism to the guarantee of equal but lackluster results for all.
Kamala Harris is now running a purely defensive campaign, not talking about policy (or to the press), and now campaigning in blue States.
Kamala Harris, in her first interview, had to explain several shifts in policy from her years in the administration to her campaign.
Kamala Harris, representing the (Un)Democratic Party, has a plan to "fix" the economy that will destroy it instead.