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Morris P. Fiorina is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Wendt Family Professor of Political Science at Stanford University. His current research focuses on elections and public opinion with particular attention to the quality of representation: how well the positions of elected...
Bachmann Derangement Overdrive
Over the course of a roughly 50-hour stretch from early Sunday to midday Tuesday, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann managed to achieve the following:
What Would Alexander Hamilton Do?
What Would Hamilton Do?
Revisiting the founding father to whom a national debt, properly funded, represented “a national blessing.” By Michael W. McConnell.
With History as a Guide, the U.S. Must Clarify Its Policy Towards China
Preserving the Reagan Legacy
In an era of cynicism, Ronald Reagan can still teach us much. By Hoover fellow James C. Miller III.
If You Smoke, Florida Wants to Tax You
The recent settlement between Florida and the tobacco companies amounts to an excise tax on smokers in all fifty states. Anyone for taxation without representation? By Hoover national fellow Daniel P. Kessler and former Hoover national fellow Jeremy Bulow.
Panel II: Responses: Security In The Age Of Liberal Democratic Erosion
Security in the Age of Liberal Democratic Erosion will focus on the critical security challenges facing liberal democracies and examine the threats of external adversaries and how democracies can respond.
Observations from the Roundtable: Stability in an Emerging World
The world’s population is being reordered. From 2020 to 2060, the working-age populations (15-64) of Europe, South Korea, and Japan are projected to shrink by over 140 million people, and, come 2060, Germany and Japan will have more people over the age of 70 than under the age of 20. The U.S. working-age population will also likely grow in that period, but as the U.S. Census Bureau has observed, the growth will be driven primarily by immigration. At the same time, sub-Saharan Africa’s working-age population will increase by nearly one billion. That region plus nine countries—India, Pakistan, Egypt, Iraq, the Philippines, Afghanistan, Guatemala, and Honduras—will account for the vast majority of the world’s new working-age men and women, over 1.4 billion in total.
The Quadrennial Fear of Ideas
Policy and presidential Campaigns
What if Boxer and Feinstein Decide to Pass the Baton When Their Terms Expire?
There are several women in California who could be potential candidates for the U.S. Senate seat
GOP Moderate Neel Kashkari Running for Calif. Governor
Undoing The Unilateral Presidency
Obama’s executive orders can be reversed easily, but he has imposed his policies in many other hard-to-stop ways.
The Iger Sanction?
California’s gubernatorial recall election hasn’t yet materialized—much less been certified or scheduled for a vote—and we already have a casualty: Chamath Palihapitiya, a Silicon Valley billionaire who has sunk $100,000 into the effort to force a referendum on California governor Gavin Newson and who reportedly has flirted with the idea of throwing his hat in the ring, only to inform a podcast audience last week that his heart (and his business sense) just wasn’t in it.
A Question of Capacity
How many children can vouchers really help?
How the FDA Violates Free Speech
Occupational Licensing Is A Bad Idea
People have a right to make a living.
Metropolitan Glory
John Julius Norwich is an earnest and somewhat stiff-backed editor...
The Inequality Smokescreen
A Fierce, Freedom-Loving Man
A founder of the Communist Party of the United States, Jay Lovestone broke with the Soviets—he opposed Stalin to his face—then broke with Marxism itself. Joining the American labor movement, working closely with the CIA, he fought communism for the rest of his life. Hoover archivist Elena Danielson describes Lovestone and his papers.

