Vice President Kamala Harris claimed the mantle of a civil rights champion as part of her presidential campaign origin fable. But her record tells a darker tale. At every step of her career, Harris has proven that the most dangerous place for a constitutional norm to be is standing between Harris and her political ambitions.
A Florida state court judge has awarded the operators of a pet store nearly $53,000 in attorney fees defending against a lawsuit over sexual harassment and gender discrimination after a manager allegedly showed a video of his genitalia to an underage female employee while on the job.
As the modern marketplace of ideas, Big Tech platforms are ground zero for government-coerced suppression of political speech.
This is why fair and free elections will be in danger if the Supreme Court does not immediately put a stop to self-interested government bureaucrats pressuring social media platforms to censor Americans’ speech online.
Ohio legislators have one last chance to protect children from “gender-affirming care.” They must not be fooled by Gov. Mike DeWine’s diluted executive order that bans gender transition surgeries but does nothing to stop the chemical castration of vulnerable children or protect equal opportunities for girls in athletics.
In the coming weeks, Texas will witness the impeachment trial of Attorney General Ken Paxton — an event that has captured public attention and raised serious concerns about the integrity of the House proceedings, compared to something worse than a kangaroo court. As the trial rules develop with a June 20 deadline in the Senate, it is vital to prioritize fairness and due process.
Like a homeowner who sees evidence of termites on the windowsill, the RNC has finally woken up to the election integrity crisis, years after Democrats systematically began hollowing out safeguards ensuring that our elections be limited to legal voters only.
The election for RNC Chairman on January 27 will be a referendum on two of the Republican Party’s foundational ideals: personal responsibility and accountability. After six years of losses and increasingly alienated voting and donor bases demanding change, our party needs fresh leadership, new vision, and fundamental changes to fulfill our promise to stakeholders.
Twitter is preparing for the midterm elections. Per reports, Twitter will now "label and demote misinformation about the upcoming US elections."
What could go wrong?
The once-revered FBI has fallen on hard times. One might pinpoint the decline beginning as far back as former Director J. Edgar Hoover’s partisan machinations during the McCarthyism years. Yet in the last several years, the bureau’s reputational hits have piled higher and higher.
Two El Monte police officers in Los Angeles County, Michael Paredes and Joseph Santana, were murdered in cold blood earlier this week by a gang member who should have been behind bars but instead was free to kill thanks to the so-called progressive criminal-justice polices in vogue in America’s cities, courtesy of woke legislators and prosecutors.
Five justices of the Supreme Court reputed to be poised to overturn Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are under attack—as is the very institution itself—after a saboteur (odds are on an activist law clerk who disagrees with the majority’s decision) leaked a draft majority opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization to Politico.
On day two of her confirmation hearings, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson – Biden’s nominee for the Supreme Court – remains as evasive as ever on her concerning legal record of leniency toward pedophiles and her views on critical race theory.
After four long days of hearings by the Senate Judiciary Committee, we are left with more questions than answers about what kind of justice Ketanji Brown Jackson would be if confirmed to the Supreme Court — and the answers the Senate received were troubling to the point of being disqualifying.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) announced Wednesday morning it had temporarily stayed its vaccine mandate for employers of over 100 employees. To date, more than thirty lawsuits have been filed across the country, including the Daily Wire’s.
Controlling the narrative is power. Authoritarian regimes know this well, and ruthlessly employ power to control public discourse and, in turn, the people themselves.
With the "Corrupt Politicians Act" (H.R. 1/S. 1) floundering, Democrats are now planning to take over elections from Washington via last year’s failed H.R. 4, the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act.
Despite its inspirational label, H.R. 4 is the Left’s Trojan horse to accomplish many of H.R. 1/S. 1’s policy goals through a back door.
Democrat control of Congress this year has been defined by one attempted power grab after another.
A federal takeover of our elections. Eliminating the legislative filibuster. Creating two guaranteed Democrat Senate seats through D.C. statehood.
Democrats frequently insist on assigning aspirational titles to bills that do the opposite of the label. The CLEAR Act (California Law Enforcement Accountability Reform Act) is no different.
With the advent of the deceptively named “vaccine passport” concept, coronavirus vaccines have quickly turned from savior hailed by an American populace desperate for a return to some semblance of normalcy into a cudgel with which to beat the vaccine heterodox into submission. Add the relentless desire for Big Tech to collect all data it can suck into a rapacious corporate maw to be digested into more profits and more power over our lives, and you have a perfect storm of tyranny.
On Monday, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted to confirm President Biden’s attorney general nominee, Merrick Garland. The full Senate should think twice before doing the same.
Throughout his two-day confirmation hearing, Democrats and Republicans questioned Judge Garland extensively on his plans to tame and regulate the Big Tech behemoths.
In advance of a scheduled March 1 vote, the Senate Judiciary Committee will hold a two-day confirmation hearing for President Joe Biden’s Attorney General nominee, Merrick Garland, on Feb. 22 and 23.
While vote tallies continue, President Trump is pushing ahead with legal challenges, and his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani said Sunday he expects to have four or five more lawsuits over alleged voter fraud in battleground states filed by the end of the week.
Judge Amy Coney Barrett, who President Trump nominated Saturday to serve on the Supreme Court, could have a major impact for decades to come on landmark civil liberties cases and other cases coming before the high court if the Republican-controlled Senate confirms her as expected.
Immediately following the passing of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, blue-check Twitterati swiftly condemned Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, outraged by his commitment to holding a vote on the resulting high court vacancy during an election year.
Joe Biden, in a way, has found the perfect running mate. Kamala Harris may be the only prominent politician in America with fewer guiding principles and a greater pure lust for power than Biden himself.
Attorney General Bill Barr has established himself as one of the few public officials willing and able to accurately describe the ongoing wave of violence and radicalism.
In an interview with Mark Levin on Sunday, Barr cut straight to the point with his description of the violent, organized, and often armed "anti-fascist" radicals who have been rioting in cities across the country.
President Trump’s Friday night commutation of the unjust 40-month prison sentence given to Roger Stone for convictions of lying to Congress and witness tampering was necessary to correct a grave injustice and abuse of power.
Harvard and elite universities like it have decided that the chaos caused by the coronavirus pandemic presents an opportunity to rob our nation’s higher education students blind – of both their tuition fees and the unique personal experiences and interactions that a college education promises.
Freedom of religion is not analogous to freedom from religion — a remedial lesson in constitutional law that the Supreme Court handed the state of Montana Tuesday.
In Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue, the Supreme Court slapped down a state law that denied state-sponsored scholarships to faith-based schools on the basis of their religious affiliation.
Absentee ballots allow voters who are unable to go to the polls on Election Day to vote, and many voters have understandably chosen them during the COVID-19 pandemic. But election experts on the right and left acknowledge universal voting by mail poses a significant risk of disenfranchising voters through fraud, mistakes, delays and other problems.
Wisconsin primary moves forward after state Supreme Court rejects governor's delay.
Polls open in Wisconsin after the state Supreme Court stops Democratic Gov. Tony Evers' postponement; Mike Tobin reports.
While living in the midst of a global pandemic, state and local governments are all issuing various decrees to mitigate the health impacts to the overall populace. However, for these top-down orders to work without societal unrest, citizens would need to have significant faith in state and local government health officials, and in the case of San Francisco and California residents, that is a tough ask.
With county-by-county coronavirus “lockdown” orders—accompanied by criminal penalties in some cases—already covering over 20 million Californians, Governor Newsom last week ordered all of California’s over 40 million residents to stay at home. The Governor’s order is accompanied by criminal penalties at the misdemeanor level, though he’s soft-pedaled talk of criminal enforcement and has sought voluntary compliance.
Where the rest of the country sees a crisis and a need to work together as a nation to combat it, Speaker Nancy Pelosi sees a dazzling opportunity to extort extreme policy goals from her colleagues as her toll for allowing safe passage to critical recovery funds to reach American families, workers, and businesses.
As a small business owner, I don’t need a $1,000 handout. This is a gimmick—let’s instead focus on solutions tailored to the problem. I need the tax relief of suspending the payroll taxes I and my workers pay.
As a San Francisco resident and business owner, I’m wondering—can I trust the health judgments of leaders who let thousands live on the streets in their own filth? And if we are now getting the homeless into shelter, why couldn’t that have happened earlier? Doesn’t their health count?
Even as the nation is focused on closing the borders to regions affected by coronavirus, the Supreme Court issued a key ruling on a much more controversial border issue, one likely to have more significant, longer-term implications. The high court blocked the Ninth Circuit’s erroneous decision declaring Migrant Protection Protocols – President Trump’s “Remain in Mexico” asylum policy – likely unconstitutional.
The fate of sanctuary jurisdictions will likely be up to the Supreme Court to decide after the Trump administration scored a major victory in the Second Circuit on Wednesday. The decision changes the legal landscape for the enforcement of immigration policy moving forward.
There’s finally a chance that The New York Times will be held accountable for lying to the American people.
The Trump campaign just filed a lawsuit against the Times for a 2019 article that falsely claimed the campaign had “an overarching deal” with “Vladimir Putin’s oligarchy” to “help the campaign against Hillary Clinton” in exchange for “a new pro-Russian foreign policy, starting with relief from the Obama administration’s burdensome economic sanctions.”
Democrats have no real solution for California’s homeless crisis, which finds an estimated 150,000 people living on the streets on any given night – enough people to create the 39th largest city in the state if they all gathered in one place.
As President Trump’s defense began its case in chief Saturday, it is plainly obvious which side is treating this effort as serious attorneys would, and which side is treating it like a political hit job.
It’s good for Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., that his prosecutor days are behind him, and that he’s now only playing one on TV as House manager for the impeachment. He’s enjoyed putting on a show for the cameras, pretending to be a brave civil servant prosecuting President Trump for “high crimes and misdemeanors.”
House Democrats appear to be moving full speed ahead in their politically driven campaign to impeach President Trump – despite the lack of convincing evidence – in an effort to detract from his many achievements in office and lower his chances of reelection.
Democratic presidential contenders are proposing some very bad ideas – but also some excellent ones – as they campaign across the country. However, they have a big problem: the excellent ideas are stolen from President Trump, the man they love to hate.v
The near-hysterical reaction of Democrats to White House Counsel Pat Cipollone’s letter on the due process deficiencies in their highly irregular impeachment proceedings against President Trump is more revealing than they admit.
The New York Times’ latest strategy in attacking Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh seems to be to keep telling lies in support of their broader anti-Trump, anti-Kavanaugh narrative.
With the decision last week by a California appeals court to reverse the conviction of Kate Steinle’s killer on a jury instruction technicality, California’s law-abiding residents are freshly reminded of how cheaply California’s sanctuary state lawmakers value our lives in comparison to the interests of illegal immigrants.
From childhood, American children are taught that whatever the contest – be it softball, hopscotch, soccer or track – you shake your opponents’ hands and say some version of “good game,” regardless of whether you win or lose.
No one – not Congress, not the president, and certainly not a state government – may unilaterally change the requirements to be president of the United States without first amending the U.S. Constitution.
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