San Francisco and Silicon Valley. New York and Amazon. Now Seattle and a ‘head tax.’ The message to high-paying jobs is not in my backyard: Our view
Author: The Editorial Board, USA TODAY
Elections 2019 deliver warnings to Donald Trump and both Republican and Democratic Parties
Republicans, a course correction is in order. Democrats, you have what looks like two parties, and only one is on a roll: Our view
Facebook doesn’t have to run paid ads peddling politicians’ lies
Mark Zuckerberg wrapping himself in the First Amendment is a cop-out, something that several hundred Facebook employees noted in a letter: Our view
In Jamal Khashoggi’s death, Saudi money is talking louder than murder
Donald Trump praises Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and Jared Kushner is among those flocking to the Saudi ‘Davos in the Desert’: Our view
Nancy Pelosi doesn’t have to hold House impeachment inquiry vote. But the speaker should.
Donald Trump is wrong on what the Constitution needs on impeachment inquiry. But a full House vote would give
investigators a stronger hand: Our view
China’s business bullying jumps to new heights over tweet by NBA Rockets GM
At least Daryl Morey got support from NBA Commissioner Adam Silver who, to his credit, said the league would adhere to American values: Our view
Donald Trump pollutes America with California scheming
Donald Trump sics EPA and DOT to punish California in its fight on climate change. His abuse of power mocks Republican deference to states: Our view
Ukraine evidence piles up on Donald Trump trading arms for political dirt on the Bidens
Whistleblower complaint, Ukraine phone call, diplomatic texts document how President Trump abused the power and prestige of his office: Our view
In the case of Donald Trump and Ukraine, Hunter Biden is guilty of poor judgment
Hunter Biden recounted that his father simply said, ‘I hope you know what you are doing.’ Joe Biden should have said more than that: Our view
2020 candidate Andrew Yang’s ‘freedom dividend’ plan comes with big liabilities
Andrew Yang’s proposal to give $1,000 a month to U.S. citizens fails math, is profligate in its spending and is wildly anti-family: Our view