Prove Me Wrong on Elections
So far, my arguments for shortening the ballot – and those of many other advocates of the reform across the political spectrum – have resulted in precisely zero action.
Jim Martin's 55 percent victory in 1988 was the highest vote share any North Carolina Republican has ever won in a high-profile statewide election.
Efforts to target big business and the wealthy for higher tax rates ignore basic facts of America's existing tax burden.
State election officials need to update tens of thousands of voting records and end the notion that thousands of centenarians are casting ballots.
While the Fed’s excessive monetary creation was a causal factor in the bubble, that didn’t explain why so much new credit ended up in housing rather than other investments.
North Carolina's Maurice Moore offered clear arguments against taxation without representation and "virtual" representation.
I disagreed with the late Bill Friday on nearly every public policy issue you can imagine.