Ivanpah is yet another example of the financial perils of allowing government bureaucrats to manipulate the market with someone else’s money for some perceived public benefit.
Editorials
Mr. Trump isn’t interested in chasing rainbows and pipe dreams regarding the end of fossil fuels.
Officials can’t count ballots that they don’t have in hand.
Democracy will be healthier if future presidents exercise more judicious use of the clemency power.
At this point, a dozen of Dr. Seuss’ Green Eggs might be cheaper than what you can find at the grocery store.
A lawsuit takes aim at the administration’s high-profile effort to take an endoscope to the national bureaucracy in the name of fiscal sanity.
Many federal rules are necessary to protect public health and safety. But the massive expansion of the regulatory state symbolizes a metastasizing federal behemoth intent on meddling in every aspect of American life.
And he’s heading to Nevada in the coming days.
President acts quickly to move forward.
Using discrimination to fix past discrimination is a fool’s errand.
Mr. Trump is a divisive figure at a time of divisive politics, but he has an opportunity in his address to set forth a path forward of unity and respect without dwelling on past insults or affronts.
The Senate began the show hearings for Donald Trump’s presidential Cabinet nominees this week. Many Democrats did not distinguish themselves.
Ronald Reagan once urged the Republican Party to broaden its appeal by “raising a banner of bold colors, no pale pastels.” Gov. Joe Lombardo doesn’t appear to be taking that advice.
Donald Trump’s imminent return is already paying dividends on the world stage.
If Gov. Newsom wants to facilitate reconstruction, he might also request technical help from those running states and municipalities who actually know how to encourage development rather than relying on those expert in killing it.