Obama: Companies Responsible for Raising Living Standards
The president urges businesses to “share” their profits and bonuses with workers.
The president urges businesses to “share” their profits and bonuses with workers.
Spending cuts that fail to tackle entitlements are “a sparrow’s belch in the midst of a typhoon,” said Alan Simpson.
The two Middle Eastern states are coping with internal protest movements of their own.
In order to combat Muslim extremism, Europe needs a “more active, muscular liberalism.”
Foreign policy experts discussed the future of Egypt and its president, Hosni Mubarak, on the American Sunday morning talk shows.
Many eurozone countries balked at proposals to enact economic reform along German lines for the whole of the currency union.
Legislators in Brazil are considering to add the “pursuit of happiness” as a right to their country’s constitution.
The Democrat suggests that rights are “given” by the government. Whatever happened to “inalienable rights”?
As Hosni Mubarak’s reign draws to a close, who could succeed the 82 year-old ruler?
House Republicans announce $74 billion in cuts, far less than the $100 billion they promised.
The Turkish foreign minister has to balance relations with old friends against new ones or risk losing both.
By announcing he will leave in September, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is hoping the protests will lose steam.
While union density in the private sector is declining, government workers are increasingly unionized across the developed world.
Mike Pence and Jim DeMint won’t run for president but Jon Huntsman might.
The United States should encourage the Egyptian military to remove President Mubarak and ease the country toward democratic elections.