State Politics & News

Coverage of state politics, elections, and conservative policy battles across all 50 states shaping America’s future.
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    • Opinion

    University of Virginia Betrays the Legacy of Its Founder, Thomas Jefferson

    The Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression, which is located in Charlottesville and is dedicated to “the defense of free expression in all its forms,” gives out annual awards called the “Jefferson Muzzles” to individuals and organizations responsible for “especially egregious or ridiculous affronts to free expression.” The center’s first such award…
    Hans von Spakovsky
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    • Opinion

    Hawaii’s False Missile Alarm Exposed Critical Weaknesses. Here’s What Must Be Done.

    The false alarm of a missile attack on Hawaii and the completely inadequate civil defense response deserve much more than snickers and head shakes. These problems must be fixed. The fiasco Jan. 13 was indeed caused by a simple human error: A state operations center worker hit the wrong button. That’s easy to fix. A…
    Steven Bucci
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    • News

    California Democrats Want Businesses to Turn Over Half Their Tax-Cut Savings to the State

    Democrat state lawmakers in California say they want some businesses to give half their tax-cut savings from congressional Republicans’ tax reform package to the state. That’s no way to create jobs and raise pay, conservatives fire back. “It’s typical that Democrats in California see every dollar back in taxpayers’ pocket as a dollar they can…
    Rachel del Guidice
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    • Opinion

    Licensing Laws Have Long Been a Drain on the Economy. But Florida Could Soon See Reform.

    Florida lawmakers are finally addressing the elephant in the barbershop: Floridians must endure 1,200 training hours, pass an exam, and pay a $223.50 fee just to cut hair for money. In the first weeks of Florida’s 60-day legislative session, the state House passed a bill, H.B. 15, to loosen the chokehold that several licensing regulations…
    John-Michael Seibler
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    • News

    DOJ Backs Effort to Repeal California Law Requiring Pro-Lifers to Promote Abortion

    The Department of Justice filed an amicus (or “friend-of-the-court”) brief at the Supreme Court, urging the justices to overturn a California law requiring pro-life crisis pregnancy centers to post information about state-funded abortions. The Supreme Court has agreed to review the law in November. The law, called the Reproductive FACT Act, requires crisis pregnancy clinics to post…
    Kevin Daley
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    • Opinion

    Judge Upholds Alabama Voter ID Law in Win for Common Sense

    A federal judge in Alabama has thrown out a lawsuit against the state’s voter ID law, finding that the law doesn’t prevent anyone from voting because “nearly the entire population of registered voters in Alabama already possess a photo ID that can be used for voting.” For those who don’t, obtaining a qualifying ID can…
    Hans von Spakovsky
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    • News

    Incoming New Jersey Governor Wants to Create an Entire Agency to Protect Illegal Immigrants

    Newly inaugurated New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy plans to establish the Garden State as a bastion of far-left policies, including a first-of-its-kind government agency devoted exclusively to protecting the rights of legal and illegal immigrants alike. Murphy, a Democrat and former Goldman Sachs financier who was swept into office on the back of former Gov….
    Jack Crowe
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    • News

    Below-Freezing Temperatures Don’t Stop Record Numbers of Pro-Lifers From Marching in Chicago

    Despite frigid temperatures, record numbers of people came out to march against abortion Sunday at Chicago’s 2018 March for Life. More than 6,000 people gathered at the march, marking the largest pro-life gathering in the Midwest to date. “This March for Life Chicago drew people of all ages, from across the Midwest,” said Dawn Fitzpatrick, president of…
    Grace Carr
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    • News

    Washington Post: We Didn’t Attack The Daily Caller, and Don’t Know Why Google Is

    Google’s relatively new “fact check” feature proves there’s something fundamentally wrong with at least some of its highly influential algorithms, after an investigation by The Daily Caller News Foundation found that the widget is both blatantly biased and tremendously faulty. The most powerful search engine in the world and a massive arbiter of online information, Google…
    Eric Lieberman
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    • News

    Delaware County Could Miss Right-to-Work Boom, Chief of Kentucky County Predicts

    GEORGETOWN, Delaware—Despite one county’s decision to reject a right-to-work law, Delaware will remain the only state in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic with a local statute prohibiting imposition of union mandates on private sector employees. The town of Seaford intends to move ahead with its right-to-work law even though surrounding Sussex County backed down in the…
    Kevin Mooney
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    • Opinion

    New York Times Gets the Facts Wrong on Land Mines

    Every year, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines publishes a report on the number of casualties caused by land mines—or so it says. And every year, gullible journalists take the report’s headline figure at face value. But this year, the worst offender is a particularly prestigious outlet: The New York Times, whose editorial board authored…
    Ted Bromund
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    • Opinion

    I’m a Mormon, and The New York Times Needlessly Defamed My Church’s Leader

    Thomas S. Monson, president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, died last week at the age of 90. Revered as a prophet by the approximately 16 million Mormons scattered across the globe, Monson devoted his life to serving God and his fellow men. So it was with great sadness that I read…
    Jordan Hess
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    • News

    Arizona Governor Says ‘Cut It Out’ to Ban on Unlicensed Haircuts for Homeless Vets

    Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey wants one occupational licensing rule to get a trim after Juan Carlos Montes de Oca was ordered to stop giving haircuts to homeless veterans by the state cosmetology board. Montes de Oca, a cosmetology student from Tucson, was inspired by a man in London who helped the homeless on his days…
    Chrissy Clark
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    • Opinion

    In a Harsh New Hampshire Winter, Passage of Education Savings Accounts Is a Breath of Spring

    As New Hampshire hunkers down for another brutal January, lawmakers are giving families something to look forward to once the snow melts: namely, more opportunities. The state House of Representatives on Jan. 3 voted in favor of an education savings account proposal, which would give families and students more options for where and how a child…
    Jonathan Butcher
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    • News

    Delaware County Stalls Right-to-Work Vote as Unions Protest

    GEORGETOWN, Delaware—County officials put off action Tuesday on a right-to-work ordinance after dozens of union members turned out in force at government offices to oppose the legislation during a public hearing. Members of the Sussex County Council asked for a formal opinion from the county attorney pending a vote that could come as early as…
    Kevin Mooney
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    • News

    California Is Officially a Sanctuary State

    A sweeping immigration law took effect Monday in California, officially making it the country’s largest sanctuary state. The controversial law, SB 54, passed the state Legislature in September and was signed into law by Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown the following month. It prevents police in California, which has by far the nation’s largest illegal immigrant…
    Will Racke
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    • News

    New York Governor Pardons 18 Illegal Immigrants

    New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo mimicked California Gov. Jerry Brown’s approach to immigration, pardoning 18 convicted illegal immigrants who faced deportation. Cuomo, a Democrat, praised himself on Twitter for his compassion Thursday before linking to a New York Times article supporting the move. Cuomo claimed the federal government is “tear[ing] families apart” with the Trump administration's current immigration…
    Nick Givas
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    • News

    California Democrat Wants to Mandate State Colleges Have Abortion Pills Ready for Students

    California lawmakers are debating whether to adopt a bill that would require California’s public universities and colleges to offer abortion drugs at their health centers. Senate Bill 320, sponsored by state Sen. Connie Leyva, D-Chino, will mandate that the state’s community colleges and public universities provide women with abortion pills for up to 10 weeks…
    Grace Carr
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    • Opinion

    Big Victory for Abortion Pill Reversal Training in California

    Facing intense political pressure from abortion activists, a major licensing agency stood its ground earlier this month and delivered a major victory for women facing unexpected pregnancies throughout the nation. In a written letter sent Dec. 19, the California Board of Registered Nursing notified Heartbeat International that it can now grant continuing education units to…
    Jay Hobbs
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    • News

    New York Attorney General Has Filed 100 Acts of Resistance Against Trump

    The New York attorney general has transformed his office into a bastion of the resistance movement by taking 100 legal or administrative actions against the Trump administration this year. Eric Schneiderman’s legal team sued the Federal Communications Commission over its rollback of net neutrality regulations, challenged each successive version of the travel ban in court,…
    Jack Crowe
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