Have the American people become so enfeebled and dependent that we need the national government involved in our purchases of leisure time activities?
The Political Notebook 2.10.23
The Democrats’ stock buyback bugaboo; political conservatives want to tell business owners what payment options they must accept.
Petersen declares war on Hobbs
The confirmation process isn’t the venue for policy debates or scoring partisan points.
The Political Notebook
The skinny budget isn’t a true status quo budget; how not approving an AEL exceedance could put Democrats in charge of the legislature.
The rationale behind Arizona’s set of spending limits, including on schools
The idea was to create a circuit breaker on creeping governmentalism.
The Political Notebook 1.27.23
Gallego takes aim at Sinema, not Republicans; Senate shouldn’t punt a debt ceiling increase to the House.
Debt ceiling isn’t the place for a spending fight
If House Republicans want to spend less, they should pass bills that spend less, not threaten a government default.
The Political Notebook 1.20.23
The politics of government shutdowns; where Hobbs is better than Ducey regarding school choice; the legislature and the open meeting law.
Hobbs’ budget is cautiously liberal
Conceptually, a consensus budget shouldn’t be that hard to negotiate, but the politics remain grim.
Can we have a productive discussion about border security and immigration?
The Biden administration’s border security proposals are serious, even if Biden is not.