California Sues To Block Trump From Revoking Its Clean Air Act Waiver
California, joined by 22 other states and jurisdictions, is suing to block the Administration’s efforts to revoke the state’s waiver to impose tougher clean air regulations.
California, joined by 22 other states and jurisdictions, is suing to block the Administration’s efforts to revoke the state’s waiver to impose tougher clean air regulations.
One of America’s fist celebrity CEO’s has passed away at the age of 94.
The longest-serving member of Congress in American history has passed away at the age of 92.
A decade after being bailed out by the Federal government, the giant automaker is slashing jobs.
Trump’s trade war will claw back 25% of the growth in GDP, slightly more than 20% of the wage growth and more than wipe out all the jobs his tax cuts would provide.
Ford, GM, and Chrysler are all moving almost exclusively to trucks, SUVs, and crossovers.
Dodge is facing controversy this morning for using the words of Martin Luther King Jr. in a Super Bowl commercial, but they’re not the only party who may have some questions to answer.
Just as the auto industry has, painfully, had to learn to adapt to a new world, the city will as well even if that means becoming a shadow of its former self.
Thanks to archaic state laws, you can look at cars in a Tesla showroom, but in my states you can’t but anything there.
The Weekly Standard is proud that Mitt Romney’s intentionally false Jeep ad was technically true.
There are signs that some Romney supporters have already decided their candidate is going to lose.
Not surprisingly, Romney campaigns staffers don’t seem to want to take responsibility for Clint Eastwood’s performance last night.
Health care is eating up 10 percent of the Pentagon’s budget and rising fast.
Mitt Romney is being rightfully ridiculed for trying to take credit for saving General Motors and Chrysler.
Romney eked out a win in the Michigan primary. He’s going to have a harder time there in November.
Was Clint Eastwood’s Chrysler ad a political message, or just a well done commercial?
The speech did exactly what it was supposed to do: kick off Obama’s re-election campaign while disguised as a call for unity.
Conservatives are rejecting Andrew Sullivan’s Newsweek essay out of hand, but they ought to pay attention to what he’s saying.
The Republican candidates for President have apparently forgotten that this guy was their party’s nominee twice.
It was clear from the start that “Cash For Clunkers” was a bad idea.
Some on the right are giving Occupy Wall Street and The 99%’ers a second look.
The Tea Party flame was lit by the battle over TARP, but they quickly forgot about those bailouts that supposedly upset them so much.
On paper, the U.S. lost $1.3 billion on the Chrysler bankruptcy, but the true cost is far higher than that.
Is our current economic situation the result of massive government intervention? The Randians certainly think so.
The new health care law’s individual mandate was the subject of another bruising court battle yesterday, but the real question in the room was what, if any, are the limits on Congressional authority?
Judicial activism doesn’t mean “reaching a decision I don’t like.”
If it was called the “Burlington Coat Factory community center” would anyone care about Cordoba House?
General Motors, and Barack Obama, are betting the future on a car that may be nothing more than an electric lemon.