Confidence in the federal government’s ability to manage rising national debt has been officially reduced for only the second time in U.S. history.
Author: Ingrid Jacques, USA TODAY
Biden is trying to sell ‘Bidenomics,’ but Americans can’t afford the president’s agenda
Polls indicate troubles ahead for President Biden’s big-spending, high-tax agenda that will further drag the nation into debt and fuel inflation.
GOP primary race is getting crowded. Does anyone have what it takes to trump Trump?
For conservatives sick of the drama, indictments and never-ending rehashing of the past, Donald Trump’s poll numbers are discouraging.
Game on. With DeSantis making it official on Twitter, the fight against Trump can begin.
Ron DeSantis has worked on raising his national profile for more than a year. He has proved a strong fundraiser, outpacing even Donald Trump.
Trump was right: ‘Russian collusion’ was a hoax. Good luck regaining public’s trust.
Special Counsel John Durham slams the FBI’s investigation – dubbed Crossfire Hurricane – of Trump campaign for its “serious lack of analytic rigor.”
Trump is stuck in the past. Other GOP candidates offer conservatives a brighter future.
Beyond Donald Trump, Republicans are sporting a more youthful, diverse presidential candidate lineup that should make Democrats jealous.
Joe Biden wants you to think GOP is the biggest ‘threat’ to Social Security. He’s wrong.
Republicans don’t want to cut entitlements. In fact, Social Security’s biggest threat is what President Biden is proposing: Doing nothing.
Donald Trump wants you to think he’s constantly the victim. Maybe he’s just a bad dude.
Republicans need to ask themselves hard questions about why it is that former President Donald Trump keeps finding himself in sticky legal situations.
Are pay gaps ‘sexist’? Democrats want more laws, but that could harm, not help, women.
As a woman, I want to be paid equally and think that should be the standard for all women. The good news is that it’s already happening.
A school choice revolution is storming the country this year. Will your state be next?
School choice is spreading across the US at a record clip, with Republican legislatures and governors thinking bigger and bolder.