by jpitney | Aug 5, 2025 | California Politics, Journalism, Journalists, Los Angeles, Mass Media, Newspapers
Sara Fischer at Axios: New York Post Media Group, a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp., will launch a new, daily Los Angeles-based newspaper called “The California Post” in early 2026, the New York Post’s editor-in-chief Keith Poole told...
by jpitney | Aug 4, 2025 | Economic Policy, Nixon
Philip Rossetti at R Street: A number of political candidates who promote price freezes—also called price controls—in industries like housing have recently won electoral victories. This trend makes it worth asking what will happen if the government freezes energy...
by jpitney | Aug 3, 2025 | Congress, House of Representatives
Don Wolfensberger at The Hill: In Congress there are few opportunities to really shine, especially if you are in the minority. That’s why efforts pay off in gathering an impressive cohort of bipartisan co-sponsors on a bill, and then on filing a discharge petition on...
by jpitney | Aug 2, 2025 | California Politics, Los Angeles
Melody Patterson at LAT: State regulators, knowing that old transmission lines could set off wildfires, proposed a safety rule in 2001 that would have forced Edison and other utilities to remove abandoned lines unless they could prove they would use them in the...
by jpitney | Aug 1, 2025 | Public Service
Melody Gutierrez at LAT: Across the country, antagonists and antigovernment “sovereign citizens” are flooding states and counties with liens like the ones Jarrett and others show how to file. In the claims, they often allege government officials owe them money or...
by jpitney | Jul 31, 2025 | Budget, Economic Policy, Trade
Jessica Riedl at WP: [E]conomists generally agree that trade wars harm long-term economic growth by limiting consumer options, raising costs, reducing investment capital and killing jobs in industries that suffer from foreign retaliation. This slowdown in the growth...
by jpitney | Jul 30, 2025 | Dreier, Philanthropy
Friends, family, and the community of Los Angeles are mourning the loss of philanthropist Wallis Annenberg. David Dreier, who was friends with Annenberg, described her as a selfless woman who was dedicated to helping others. He also said the LA area is a better place...
by jpitney | Jul 29, 2025 | Los Angeles, Philanthropy
James R. Hagerty at WSJ: Wallis Annenberg had her whole life to be rich but only the last 23 years to give away large amounts of her family’s fortune. She donated to hundreds of causes, some of them surprising, and relished her role as a benefactor. Annenberg, the...
by jpitney | Jul 28, 2025 | Debt, Economic Policy
Desmond Lachman at AEI: A key vulnerability of the United States is its high dependence on foreigners to finance its large budget deficits. One measure of this dependency is that foreigners own almost one-third of the $29 trillion of outstanding U.S. Treasury bonds....
by jpitney | Jul 27, 2025 | California Politics, Journalism, Journalists
James Rainey at LAT: California lawmakers and Gov. Gavin Newsom jammed through a $322-billion budget last month. The biggest headline: Spending to provide healthcare for many undocumented immigrants went away. But there’s a nugget that you might have lost in the fine...