Unions outpace corporations in super PAC spending
Unions outpace corporations in super PAC spending
Labor unions are losing influence, popularity and the fight over labor policy in many states. To soften their fall, unions have dramatically increased political spending. A study from the Center for Public Integrity shows labor unions have notably increased political spending nationally in the first half of 2013. During the six-month period, unions contributed $10 million to...
By Justin Hegy
It’s time for Illinois politicians to embrace school choice
It’s time for Illinois politicians to embrace school choice
Kyle Olson Publisher, Founder and CEO EAGnews.org America is supposed to be about freedom. One of the founding principles of our country is that we are naturally endowed with the inalienable right to choose how we want to live our lives. We drive the cars we want. We shop where we want. We live where...
By Chris Andriesen
New study shows strong teachers union bosses hurt student performance
New study shows strong teachers union bosses hurt student performance
It’s becoming clear that teachers’ union bosses are doing a lousy job representing the best interests of their members. Case in point: Chicago Teachers’ Union President Karen Lewis. Not only did she organize a strike and agree to a contract that she knew would cost thousands of her fellow union members their jobs, but she...
More than 136,000 Medicaid enrollees in Illinois found ineligible for the program
More than 136,000 Medicaid enrollees in Illinois found ineligible for the program
In January, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, or HFS, began a new project verifying eligibility for Illinois’ 2.7 million Medicaid enrollees. For years, state workers had failed to take adequate steps to ensure the people receiving Medicaid benefits were actually eligible for the program. As an Auditor General report noted, state workers failed to...
By Jonathan Ingram
ObamaCare redefines ‘large business’
ObamaCare redefines ‘large business’
The American people are about to receive yet another ObamaCare trick in the coming weeks. While many small businesses thought they would be safe from the costliest provisions of the Affordable Care Act, or ACA, commonly referred to as ObamaCare, some of the nation’s small employers are finding out that they may be counted as “large employers”...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Pizza with a purpose
Pizza with a purpose
Dimitri has found that investing in good people makes the difference in an industry where the customer experience matters.
By Hilary Gowins
Indiana decision to strike down Right-to-Work law should not stand
Indiana decision to strike down Right-to-Work law should not stand
Judge John Sedia of the Lake County, Ind., Superior Court has held that the state’s Right-to-Work law violates the state constitution. While the Sept. 9 decision is disappointing, neither union officials nor union critics should put much stock in it. The state will appeal the case to the Indiana Supreme Court, which is very likely to reverse...
By Paul Kersey
More than 2 million Illinoisans dependent on food stamps
More than 2 million Illinoisans dependent on food stamps
The total number of Illinoisans on food stamps increased to nearly 2.15 million in June. One-sixth of Illinoisans, or 16.7 percent, are enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. More than 100,000 people were added to the SNAP rolls in June. This is an artificially high number resulting from disaster-response programs deployed in...
By Ted Dabrowski, John Klingner
Want to criticize your government? Better get permission first.
Want to criticize your government? Better get permission first.
If you want to criticize a politician, should you have to check with your lawyer first or get the government’s permission? You wouldn’t think so – at least not in America, where we have a First Amendment that’s supposed to protect our right to free speech. Unfortunately, laws enacted under the guise of “campaign finance...
Chicago: highest gas prices of any major U.S. metro area
Chicago: highest gas prices of any major U.S. metro area
Chicago has the highest gas prices of any major metropolitan area in the United States. A gallon of gas is now $4.06 on average in Chicago; the national average is $3.56. Though outside factors influence the raw price of gas, one of the reasons Chicago’s prices are consistently among the most expensive in the nation is the additional...
By Hilary Gowins
The CTU strike, one year later – the battle lives on
The CTU strike, one year later – the battle lives on
A year ago, schoolchildren throughout Chicago were returning to class as the Chicago Teachers Union, or CTU, and Chicago Public Schools, or CPS, officials reached an agreement, ending a bitter nine-day strike. Looking back on the strike and its aftermath, there were few clear winners; but there were many losers. In the wake of the...
By Paul Kersey
Less-bad news is still bad news
Less-bad news is still bad news
If you were told that your health insurance premiums would be doubling next year, would you be celebrating? Only if you were expecting them to triple. A new study of ObamaCare health insurance premiums in 17 states and the District of Columbia suggests that the cost for consumers will be lower than the previous Congressional Budget Office...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Outsourcing ObamaCare
Outsourcing ObamaCare
A recent editorial in the Chicago Tribune criticized the state Department of Insurance for not publicly releasing health insurance premium rates for the health care exchange. The exchange is a central feature of ObamaCare in which individuals and small businesses will begin buying private insurance coverage Oct. 1. With rates expected to go up dramatically, it’s no...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
Destroying public audio recordings a crime against transparency
Destroying public audio recordings a crime against transparency
Recording and publishing the audio of board meetings is an essential public good. This form of transparency creates an opportunity for the public to be informed about government bodies and elected officials that represent them, and gives the public an important tool to hold government accountable for its actions. Unfortunately, Belvidere Township in Boone County...
By Brian Costin