Yuval Levin of @AEI has argued for adding 150 new House seats, but he admits it is a "tough" idea to sell to Americans.
"Not a lot of people look at the House now and say, gee, I wish there were more of these people."
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Congress didn’t lose its war powers. It neglected them. Decades of bipartisan deference to presidents have weakened the Founders’ constitutional check — widening the gap between the foreign policy voters want and the one they get, argues Cato’s @brandan_buck.
https://t.co/AZrWrpizGD
“Our immigration policies are undermining supply of labor in a lot of different areas, including and particularly health care,” said health care expert @lanheechen.
What has made the American health care system “the finest in the world…is that we have been able to train and retain talent from around the world to serve the needs of the American people.”
Starting a “war of choice” while ignoring allies has consequences, @RahmEmanuel tells @ianbremmer at the @92ndStreetY.
Listen to the full conversation in the last episode of the #GZEROWorld podcast.
In this conversation with Margaret Hoover on PBS's Firing Line about Congress and its war powers, we discuss what's gone wrong--and how we might fix it.
Other nations put airports, airlines, and private contractors in charge of security screening, like these 10 best airports. Congress should restructure airport screening so that travelers aren't held hostage by TSA and dysfunctional federal budgeting. https://t.co/tAoQR5BukX
The Jones Act is a century-old law that raises costs, hurts the environment, and blocks competition—while failing to deliver on its promises. It’s time to scrap this failed policy, explains Cato's @cpgrabow.
Justice Gorsuch nails the political meaning of today’s #tariff decision by SCOTUS. We have a deliberating legislature designed to make decisions on tariffs and other issues. Congress needs to do its job, and presidents of all parties need to stop circumventing the process.
The US is winning if you track the economy, market indices, or the parade of countries lining up to cut deals with Trump.
But while the short-term picture looks strong, the US is systematically trading long-term strategic advantages for immediate tactical gains, with the accumulating costs hiding in plain sight, says @ianbremmer in his column.
https://t.co/3WuLkkHGwC
FOX: What's the problem with the wind farm in Rhode Island?
Zeldin: The president is not a fan of wind
FOX: This project is largely almost finished. You got AI, the electrification of everything around us. Why would you take any power offline?
"If businesses are going to invest in long-term factories, they need predictability and consistency out of Washington," says @ManhattanInst senior fellow @JessicaBRiedl.
"Not a president turning the tariff dials every five minutes."
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