
James Wigderson: Would Democrats filibuster Gorsuch if Trump was normal?
Are Trump’s erratic behavior and low poll numbers a factor in this fight?
Submit columns for consideration to wisopinion@wispolitics.com
Are Trump’s erratic behavior and low poll numbers a factor in this fight?
It’s getting harder and harder to tell the difference between our politics and what goes on in Arizona nowadays.
From now on, there is no respite for the weary. You can run, but progressive condescension is going to find you. Politics get clicks, and clicks bring revenue. There is no incentive for all this new punditry to be accurate or fair.
March 24, 2017 is a date that Donald Trump and his gaggle of billionaire fat cats should long remember. It’s the date that Trump failed to deliver his first major deal to his ardent supporters.
Trump’s plan would cut the National Institutes of Health by $5.8 billion — roughly 18 percent of its entire budget. For the NIH, which funds the vast majority of basic science on diseases like Alzheimer’s, this would be the biggest budget cut in history.
One hundred years ago, on April 4, 1917, Wisconsin’s Republican senator, “Fighting Bob” La Follette, voted against entry into World War I and gave an impassioned and prophetic speech.
The order directs state agencies to track and post their record response times and, like last year’s order, gives procedural guidance that should make it easier for citizens to request and receive records.
Would require one-year wait for ex-legislators and legislative aides to become lobbyists.
At least 30 other states have enacted legislation that allows them to produce hemp for either research or commercial purposes. It’s time for Wisconsin to catch up.
A life is taken by gun violence every three days in the City of Milwaukee. If someone died every three days from a preventable disease, you’d better believe we’d be working to find a cure for that. So why are guns any different?
The last three biennial state budgets in Wisconsin saw the enactment of dramatic reductions in state spending on K-12 public education. As you may have guessed, deciding to spend less on education as a state has not meant that education is any less expensive today than it was four budgets ago.
It’s possible that the Trump-Ryan bill is merely mostly dead, rather than thoroughly demised.
Cutting federal funds to local law enforcement would probably do more to harm to public safety than illegal immigration does.
Pundits on both the left and the right say the threat of a constitutional overhaul is real.
Our state budget invests more into K-12 education than ever before in Wisconsin.
The media campaign, complete with its attack ads and spending that is provided by — laughably — “independents,” makes it next to impossible to compete.
In “Two Minutes with Mitch” radio personality Mitch Henck says what Democrats should do now that Tim Cullen out of the run for governor.
The column below reflects the views of the author, and these opinions are neither endorsed nor supported by WisOpinion.com. On Wednesday, North Carolina GOP Senator Richard Burr, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, indicated that the committee’s investigation into Russian
Unlike President Trump, we urge policymakers to consider the scientific evidence that atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide are increasing and global climate change is occurring, at least in part, as a result of man-made activities.
In Wisconsin, should a person suffering a slow and painful death from a terminal illness have the right to medically end his or her life?
Are Trump’s erratic behavior and low poll numbers a factor in this fight?
It’s getting harder and harder to tell the difference between our politics and what goes on in Arizona nowadays.
From now on, there is no respite for the weary. You can run, but progressive condescension is going to find you. Politics get clicks, and clicks bring revenue. There is no incentive for all this new punditry to be accurate or fair.
March 24, 2017 is a date that Donald Trump and his gaggle of billionaire fat cats should long remember. It’s the date that Trump failed to deliver his first major deal to his ardent supporters.
Trump’s plan would cut the National Institutes of Health by $5.8 billion — roughly 18 percent of its entire budget. For the NIH, which funds the vast majority of basic science on diseases like Alzheimer’s, this would be the biggest budget cut in history.
One hundred years ago, on April 4, 1917, Wisconsin’s Republican senator, “Fighting Bob” La Follette, voted against entry into World War I and gave an impassioned and prophetic speech.
The order directs state agencies to track and post their record response times and, like last year’s order, gives procedural guidance that should make it easier for citizens to request and receive records.
Would require one-year wait for ex-legislators and legislative aides to become lobbyists.
At least 30 other states have enacted legislation that allows them to produce hemp for either research or commercial purposes. It’s time for Wisconsin to catch up.
A life is taken by gun violence every three days in the City of Milwaukee. If someone died every three days from a preventable disease, you’d better believe we’d be working to find a cure for that. So why are guns any different?
The last three biennial state budgets in Wisconsin saw the enactment of dramatic reductions in state spending on K-12 public education. As you may have guessed, deciding to spend less on education as a state has not meant that education is any less expensive today than it was four budgets ago.
It’s possible that the Trump-Ryan bill is merely mostly dead, rather than thoroughly demised.
Cutting federal funds to local law enforcement would probably do more to harm to public safety than illegal immigration does.
Pundits on both the left and the right say the threat of a constitutional overhaul is real.
Our state budget invests more into K-12 education than ever before in Wisconsin.
The media campaign, complete with its attack ads and spending that is provided by — laughably — “independents,” makes it next to impossible to compete.
In “Two Minutes with Mitch” radio personality Mitch Henck says what Democrats should do now that Tim Cullen out of the run for governor.
The column below reflects the views of the author, and these opinions are neither endorsed nor supported by WisOpinion.com. On Wednesday, North Carolina GOP Senator Richard Burr, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, indicated that the committee’s investigation into Russian
Unlike President Trump, we urge policymakers to consider the scientific evidence that atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide are increasing and global climate change is occurring, at least in part, as a result of man-made activities.
In Wisconsin, should a person suffering a slow and painful death from a terminal illness have the right to medically end his or her life?