The risks to the United States from more direct intervention on behalf of Ukraine are impossible to assess. Staying within the mainstream of the European concensus, as the Biden administration has done, is the right course.
Ignoring that Prop. 208 passed is a big political mistake
Ducey and GOP lawmakers are picking a losing fight if they attempt to lower income tax rates without also enacting a Prop. 208 level increase in education funding.
Democrats’ best hope for 2022: Republicans
The political stupidity of the lawsuit by the Arizona Republican Party to have mail ballots declared unconstitutional is difficult to overstate.
A missing opportunity for the community colleges
This would be an ideal time for the Mariopa Community Colleges to move aggressively into offering four-year degrees, but legislative restrictions sharply, and wrongheadedly, limit that option.
Algebra 2 and rethinking high school
Allowing practical alternatives to Algebra 2 as a high school graduation requirement is a step in the right direction. But the whole sequential edifice of education, from high school on, needs rethinking.
Ducey’s water authority proposal isn’t even half-baked
Arizona should see what conservation and expanded water markets can do before committing to big-dollar augmentation projects, such as desalination.
Biden’s State of the Union hit an inflation road bump
Inflation is its own truth test. Come November, it will either contine to be elevated and eroding standards of living, or it won’t.
Putin unites Europe
The initiative and resolve a united Europe has mounted against Putin’s invasion of Ukraine may be a historical turning point. To be sustainable, however, requires institutional reforms, including of NATO.
Why Maricopa County is exactly the right size
There are substantial advantages and benefits to having a county government that spans virtually the entire metro area. Which makes breaking it up and creating four new, smaller counties a monumentally bad idea.
Time for a simple, straightforward universal voucher proposal
The state has enough money to both substantially increase funding for public schools and provide a larger measure of social equity for parents who want to send their kids to private schools.