Washington Examiner / Magazine
January 22, 2019 Issue
January 22, 2019 Print Edition
Cover Story
Wall-to-wall politics
Donald Trump officially announced his candidacy for president on June 16, 2015. It was the first time he promised that, if elected, he’d see to it that the United States built a wall along its southern border. Over the next 18 months, the wall would define his candidacy. Two years into his first term, it defines his presidency still. A fight over congressional funding for the wall has triggered the longest government shutdown in the nation’s history. But the $5.7 billion price tag isn't really the core of the dispute. No, the fight became intractable because the wall has become a conceptual holy grail for the president and a stop-it-at-all-costs bugbear for Democratic leaders. It is likely to remain so for long after the shutdown ends and government work resumes. While it began in December,...

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Your Land

How Tinseltown sparked a global health crisis
Magazine - Your Land
How Tinseltown sparked a global health crisis
The World Health Organization says that the scientifically illiterate movement opposed to vaccination poses one of the 10...
Trump’s burger banquet, with ‘Old Hickory’ sauce
Magazine - Your Land
Trump’s burger banquet, with ‘Old Hickory’ sauce
It was the fast food feast heard ’round the world. On Jan. 14, President Trump welcomed the Clemson...
Think you’re a cool politician? Drop a mixtape
Magazine - Your Land
Think you’re a cool politician? Drop a mixtape
In mid-January, one of the hottest mixtapes was released, not by any rapper or singer, but by Kamala...
Where problem words go to die
Magazine - Your Land
Where problem words go to die
Why isn’t there a good name for opposing political correctness, wokeness, policing speech, and so on? In a...
Magazine - Your Land
Baba O’Rourke’s teenage wasteland
National Review editor Rich Lowry asked recently, “Is Beto Doing OK?” It’s a fair question. Beto is Robert O’Rourke, the Texan and former congressman who ran unsuccessfully to...

Business

Corporate America ramps up attacks against shareholder advisory firms
Business
Corporate America ramps up attacks against shareholder advisory firms
Top lobbying firms are intensifying attacks on proxy advisers, with corporations seeking to rein in firms...
Corporate dealmaking set to slow further after first decline in a decade
Business
Corporate dealmaking set to slow further after first decline in a decade
This isn’t exactly what corporate America expected under a president who built his reputation on The...

Washington Briefing

Economy
Warren would be the most pro-union nominee in generations
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., should she launch a White House bid and win, would be the most pro-union...
Magazine - Washington Briefing
Trump’s chance to remake liberal courts
President Trump’s efforts to transform the federal judiciary will enter a new front in the second half of...
Infrastructure
US Chamber launches contest for infrastructure funding ideas
Democrats and Republicans have both signaled interest in tackling infrastructure this Congress, but a major question mark surrounding...
Magazine
‘White supremacy’ was a leftist scam
When facts are stranger than fiction, pundits will say, “You can’t make this stuff up.” But actually, you can make...
Magazine
Should Alito stay or go?
Through the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, the 1857 Dred Scott case, and back to the beginning of the republic,...

Life & Arts

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