Letter: Now is not time for a tax cut
We keep wanting to lower taxes but then never get done what is needed.
To refine your search through our archives use our Advanced Search
We keep wanting to lower taxes but then never get done what is needed.
Indiana’s governor said Friday he’s waiting to decide on whether to continue his court fight against a new law giving state legislators more power to intervene during public health emergencies.
“When I heard that they were having trouble with their oven, and it just didn’t appear to be repairable, I just felt kind of compelled to go, ’Hey, we got one,’” said Puccini’s Pizza & Pasta co-owner Don Main.
The state released the latest statistics for so-called breakthrough cases, hospitalizations and deaths on Thursday.
Democrat Rep. Justin Moed and former Democratic Senate candidate Ashley Eason have both publicly announced interest in running for the Indiana Senate in a new downtown Indianapolis district.
U.S. employers added just 194,000 jobs in September, a second straight tepid gain and evidence that the pandemic still has a grip on the economy with many companies struggling to fill millions of open jobs.
The public wants this. Our legislators are afraid to listen.
For my entire life, I have listened to the debate about legalizing marijuana in America, or in whatever state I was living at whatever time. Good talks, each one. But those talks are no longer hypothetical.
It’s a myth that vaping is safe. More correctly, e-cigarettes have the potential of being less toxic than combusted tobacco.
To be clear, the education of our children is at stake.
The jobs that fuel central Indiana’s economy will increasingly require a workforce with some form of postsecondary education.
The result of that inflexible approach was a lot of forced bad small talk and Internet surfing by my colleagues to kill time.
A partisan redistricting process allows the Republican supermajority to systemically craft elections that are no longer competitive.
In the current maps, Republicans didn’t really have to do much gerrymandering because of the political demographics of Indiana.
Keepers of The Remnant Trust … are diametrically opposed to the idea that the documents must never be touched by the public.
Ultimately, policies might matter more than pictures. But the images are not only hard to forget, they are the foundation for campaign ads.
They have shown that they can do a great deal with very little.
I was appalled at the hubris and ignorance of the agent, as well as his complete lack of any apparent concern for the victims of Nassar’s ongoing criminality.
Democrats are happy to talk about Georgians’ future and actual concerns while Republicans wallow in conspiracy theories about the past.
Documents obtained from IU by a law professor indicate trustees initially approached then-IU President Michael McRobbie about extending his contract six months in case a search for a new president lasted beyond his retirement date.