Politics
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Editorial: Data centers aren't the enemy -- They're the future
For a bunch of unremarkable warehouses, they’re generating a lot of controversy. Data centers — low-slung facilities that house the server racks and energy systems that underpin the digital economy — have become a heated issue on the campaign trail. Politicians from both parties are pushing bills to restrict them. Some want a nationwide �...Read more
Conor Sen: Florida's future -- More wealth, higher costs and less growth
Early signs of a recovery in Florida’s housing market should start to quiet the chatter surrounding the state’s real-estate and migration slump of the past few years. But Florida is unlikely to return to the model of rapid population growth and construction that have helped it boom.
A surge in the cost of housing and insurance since the ...Read more
Nir Kaissar: Overpaid CEOs are the wrong target for affordability warriors
If companies won’t pay their workers a living wage, the government will try to do it for them. I laid out this argument in a 2019 column and have since watched with dismay as ever more counterproductive policies are proposed — and some adopted — around the country to address affordability. These range from millionaire taxes and rent ...Read more
Editorial: Train projects keep running into trouble
The most successful American train company of the last century may have been in “Atlas Shrugged.”
A recent audit of Brightline Trains Florida shows that the company is in serious financial trouble. Ernst &Young said it has “substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern.” In other words, it doesn’t have...Read more
Commentary: Defenders of the Jones Act have lost
For more than a century, the Jones Act has survived on purported economic and security grounds. Its waiver by the Trump administration for Operation Epic Fury reveals serious flaws in both rationales.
Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, as it’s formally known, requires that goods shipped between U.S. ports travel on vessels that ...Read more
Commentary: Trump's blockade is an act of war, not the end of war
President Donald Trump recently described the U.S. naval blockade of Iran as “a very friendly blockade.” There is no such thing.
A blockade is an act of war, using armed forces to restrict another nation’s movement, commerce and access to the sea. It does not become peaceful because no one challenges it on a particular day.
Trump’s ...Read more
Jackie Calmes: Trump's judicial nominees are fact-challenged and unfit
Who won the 2020 election?
Was the Capitol attacked on Jan. 6, 2021?
Can Donald Trump be elected to a third term as president?
No brainers, right?
The answers are, of course, "Joe Biden," "yes" and "no." Any fact- and reality-based American would say so. But that humongous class of people pointedly doesn't include the president of the United...Read more
Anita Chabria: Abortion access just took another blow. California wasn't spared
In the ancient days of 2022, when the Supreme Court sledgehammered abortion rights with the Dobbs decision, the (Republican) party line was that the issue had returned to where it belonged: the states.
Fast forward to 2026 and it would now seem that the antiabortion crowd, faced with the aggressive pro-choice response of states such as ...Read more
Commentary: Which Democrat could repair the damage Trump did?
Democrats have a huge opportunity to make a huge difference. But whether they’ll grab it is a huge question.
In 2020, I wrote that voters were “weary, anxious and looking for salve” after President Donald Trump’s first term. I said then that the experienced, reassuring Joe Biden fit the moment. Now I fear that if Democrats nominate a ...Read more
Commentary: The Ted Turner I knew bet on what others missed
Ted Turner died Wednesday at 87, and the world feels a little less interesting, a little less imaginative and a little less fun without him in it — but also a lot better off because he was here.After hearing the news of his passing, one moment came to mind that embodied how he moved through the world: a very drunk Turner giving an interview ...Read more
Editorial: Florida harms women, then keeps it secret
Pregnancies can kill.
But Florida’s Maternal Mortality Review Committee would rather not talk about it.
The state Department of Health committee gathers and analyzes data on mothers who lose their lives to pregnancy. Understanding life-threatening pregnancies is the baseline for finding ways to treat them.
For five years, state health ...Read more
Editorial: The real redistricting scandal -- DeSantis treating Florida's constitution as optional
“Signed, Sealed, and Delivered.”
Those were the words Gov. Ron DeSantis wrote in a post on X after signing newly redrawn congressional maps into law on Monday.
The new maps are expected to give Florida Republicans an additional four seats in Congress. But the more troubling issue is how DeSantis achieved this.
In an effort to help the GOP...Read more
Lisa Jarvis: Psychedelics' trip to mainstream medicine comes with risk
The White House directive to put psychedelics on a regulatory fast track is at once welcome and worrisome. The attention to psychedelics is overdue, and there’s a real opportunity to build a stronger scientific base for a promising field.
Yet this area of medicine also demands extra care — or the U.S. risks unleashing complex therapies ...Read more
Commentary: How the American Revolution created a great trading nation
We think of wars as conflicts between militaries, decided by force. However, as the German military theorist Carl von Clausewitz famously said, “War is … an act of force to compel our enemy to do our will.”
We see this in the current conflict with Iran. The United States has destroyed much of Iran’s military infrastructure and killed ...Read more
Editorial: How blue cities reduced crime
Democrat-run cities have found a way to reduce crime: adopt policies pushed by Republicans.
In April, Baltimore had four homicides. That’s its lowest monthly number in at least 50 years. It’s not just a one-month blip. In 2025, Baltimore endured 133 homicides. That was the lowest annual number since 1965.
Four years ago, these statistics ...Read more
Justin Fox: We'll miss gas taxes when they're gone
The sharp rise in gasoline prices caused by the Iran war has led to bipartisan calls, and in some cases action, to reduce U.S. gas taxes. At least three Republican-run states have declared gas-tax holidays, and three Democratic U.S. senators have introduced legislation to suspend the federal gas tax until October. Several European countries have...Read more
Editorial: Illinois changes the label on school absenteeism, not the reality
The Illinois State Board of Education has recommended swapping out “chronic absenteeism,” a metric that tracks how many students miss 10% of school days, for “consistent attendance,” the percent of students who have been present for 90% or more of the school year.
It’s the flip side of the same coin, but it’s a tad Orwellian and it...Read more
Commentary: The need for heard (not a typo) immunity
On April 26, 1954, Janice Nichols rolled up her sleeve and became part of the largest vaccine trial in history. That year, 1.8 million first- to third-graders were vaccinated for polio across 44 U.S. states, Canada and Finland.
At the time she entered the research study, Nichols was six years old. She had already survived polio herself, and was...Read more
Commentary: Some people struggle with Mother's Day. Can you 'opt out'?
How can you “opt out” of your mother? I recently received a kindly worded email from Ancestry.com.
“We realize that for some, Mother’s Day may be a tough time, if you prefer not to receive emails about our Mother’s Day sale you can opt out below, but don’t worry even if you choose to opt out, you’ll still continue to get other ...Read more
Commentary: Xavier Becerra shows that his loyalty lies with fossil fuels
In June 2017, with President Donald Trump newly installed in office for the first time, one of the biggest battles with the administration was about oil. He’d just named the chief executive of Exxon Mobil, Rex Tillerson, as his secretary of state, even though great reporting — in the Los Angeles Times among others — had recently shown that...Read more




















































