The politicians now want giant taxes. They want “integrity fees” for the sports leagues.
Opinion Columns
It only took four years of cover-ups and two students alleging physical assaults, but the Clark County School District is finally doing the right thing about Jason Wright.
There was nothing bipartisan about the congressional delegation attending the opening ceremony of the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem last Monday.
Often what a candidate won’t say is more telling than what they want to talk about. Consider Democrat gubernatorial frontrunners Steve Sisolak and Chris Giunchigliani.
The Sun re-published the entire New York Times article except for my quote. My quote, which was central to the story, was removed. Deleted. Omitted.
Throwing and hitting a child with a desk hard enough to leave a bruise isn’t a firing offense at the Clark County School District — if you’re the husband of the school board president.
It’s clear Trump has driven Democrats crazy. It’s also clear what’s about to happen. A redwave is coming.
When it comes to being extremely liberal, Giunchigliani has a 30-year head start on Sisolak. He’s hoping a few million dollars in advertisements can close the gap.
President Donald Trump has the White House running on “fast forward.” He is pushing the once crusty and creaky foreign policy apparatus to move at the speed of Twitter.
A first-year teacher at the Clark County School District will make $15.25 an hour — just in benefits. Teachers at the top of the pay scale make over $100 an hour in pay and benefits.
Congress should ban semi-automatic weapons, and the U.S. should have remained in the Iran deal. Obamacare contained significant advances, and Congress should fix it, not repeal it. That’s according to Regent and Congressional District 4 Democrat candidate Allison Stephens.
All that’s left is eight years of golf and a fake Nobel Peace Prize, awarded for achieving nothing.
A survivor of Florida’s high school shooting is now parroting false information about Nevada’s stalled background check initiative.
The more they talk about Stormy Daniels, the more they turn off the American people.
The U.S. Senate faces a clear choice as it prepares to confirm — or reject — Acting CIA Director Gina Haspel as the permanent head spook.