The SEIU’s power grab puts patients at risk • Democratic candidates for Senate District 36 are thoroughly unqualified
Monday, February 17, 2025 |
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| | California drivers are stuck between two bad options with escalating costs and policymakers continue to make matters worse. |
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| Nurses work hard, and they deserve to be supported—but they’re being held back by a union more interested in its own growth than in improving healthcare for both nurses and the patients they serve. |
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| Things aren’t getting done precisely because we keep electing people like Pham and Diep. |
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| As we race toward a financial cliff in this country — and we most certainly are — for the sake of our children and future generations, Americans must consider what federal expenditures they deem necessary. |
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| If something is working, and the memory of the 1994 nightmare remains green, why take a chance on a risky change? |
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| In the coming months, we’ll probably learn a lot more about how so many people in government jobs were able to buy so many mansions. |
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| In an alternative world where a Harris or Gavin Newsom were president, would you be comfortable with this kind of imperial presidency? |
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| With the fuel load still looming, before rebuilding, Californians should insist that policymakers allow insurers to establish risk mitigation systems proven to prevent urban conflagrations. |
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| n a court filing Wednesday, lawyers for Elon Musk said that he would withdraw his consortium’s eye-popping bid of $94.7 billion for Sam Altman’s OpenAI if its board of directors would agree to retain its status as a charity, rather than go ahead with a planned, potentially lucrative conversion to for-profit status. |
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| California taxpayers will be watching to see if HSR’s special interest supporters try to repurpose other state funds to keep the high-speed rail project on life support. |
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