Nathan Gotsch: Elected officials critical of their parties in private
To understand the landscape clearly, we sought frank assessments of both major parties.
To understand the landscape clearly, we sought frank assessments of both major parties.
The Transportation Department proposal represents the administration’s latest bid to unwind a suite of policies spurring electric vehicle production that Trump has derided as an “EV mandate.”
The historic gift has little precedent, with few single charitable commitments in the past 25 years exceeding $1 billion, much less multiple billions.
House Speaker Todd Huston and Senate President Pro Tem Roderic Bray announced Monday that rather than hold a special session, the Indiana Legislature will convene for an early start to its regular session.
Clusters of lawmakers, Republicans and Democrats, are meeting privately, searching for ways out of the impasse, which hinges on striking a deal for preserving health care subsidies.
Charter schools have grown in student enrollment and political clout since coming to Indiana in 2001. Will recent changes finally push IPS into becoming an all-charter system?
I’m not sure public broadcasting in Indiana will be able to overcome the whims of Donald Trump.
The impact of President Trump’s executive order remains unclear because states set laws and handle the process of involuntary commitments.
Republicans are using their majorities in Congress to push aside Democratic opposition, but they ran into a series of political and policy setbacks.
For months, as Musk emerged as the president’s constant companion and self-proclaimed “first buddy,” the question hovered of how long a duet could last between two men used to soloing on center stage. Thursday’s angry exchanges provided a definitive answer.
Sports tourism projects have popped up all over the state—from Columbus and Noblesville to Hammond and Newton County. But the recent push to make Indiana a go-to destination for youth sport competitions started, arguably, in Westfield.
The new chair of the Hamilton County Democratic Party has a hefty challenge in the northern suburbs of Indianapolis, which have historically been dominated by Republicans.
Central to the package is the GOP’s commitment to extending some $4.5 trillion in tax breaks, as well as spending cuts and work requirements for Medicaid and nutrition assistance.
Overall, the package is touching off the biggest political debate over taxes, spending and the nation’s priorities in nearly a decade.
President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced a baseline tax on imports from all countries, as well as what he called “reciprocal” tariffs on dozens of nations that run trade surpluses with the U.S.
Kokomo native Shawn Fain, president of the United Auto Workers and previous Trump critic, praised the administration for “stepping up to end the free-trade disaster.”
Marketing researchers say Steak n Shake is the latest example of brands targeting increasingly polarized consumers across the country.
About 40 witnesses from across the state—including more than a dozen embroiled in contentious Hamilton County elections—weighed in Wednesday on legislation that calls for upending Indiana’s nonpartisan school board system.
The administration has stopped publishing daily numbers, and Trump officials said they will release the data on a monthly basis to conserve resources.
IBJ corrects errors in stories and columns. When those are errors of fact or clarifications of context or tone, we will put those corrections here, with links to the corrected stories.