Jan. 12, 2018
Happy Friday from Washington. The recent flare-up over Jerusalem is just one piece of the peace puzzle for Israelis and Palestinians. Rachel del Guidice covers a Heritage Foundation forum featuring Rep. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla. Germany's retreat on climate change is no surprise, Nick Loris writes. Kentucky thrives on something Delaware doesn’t have, a right-to-work fan tells Kevin Mooney. Plus: Michelle Malkin on ending "temporary" asylum for foreigners, Jordan Hess on anti-Mormon sentiment at The New York Times, and Kelsey Harkness on Oprah and other Problematic Women. Enjoy your weekend.
Germany, a vocal critic of the U.S. decision to exit the Paris climate accord, is preparing to abandon its 2020 climate targets.
Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin calls the revocation "monstrous" and calls on Democrats to hold government funding hostage until the nearly 2-decade-old "temporary" protections are restored indefinitely.
"In the Arab world, if you are acting swiftly and with strength, that is something that makes a big impression on a lot of those leaders," says Rep. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla.
The lawsuit describes a corporate culture in which managers and employees alike conspire to stifle conservative views and retaliate against conservative employees, while implementing race- and gender-based hiring and advancement criteria that may be unlawful.
Despite one county’s decision to reject a right-to-work law, Delaware will remain the only state in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic with a local statute prohibiting imposition of union mandates on private sector employees.
Kelly Clarkson is under fire for being OK with spanking her kids.
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The New York Times’ coverage of the deaths of Fidel Castro and Hugh Hefner had a very different tone than the coverage of the death of a conservative Mormon leader.
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