
Smerconish: Should racial and ethnic identity categories be eliminated?
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Wall Street Journal
a minute ago
- Wall Street Journal
Democrats Choose Mamdani II
Many elected Democrats want to distance themselves from the party's New York mayoral nominee, Zohran Mamdani. Minnesota progressives want to send Mr. Mamdani some socialist backup. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey is up for re-election, but he was snubbed at last weekend's Democratic convention, whose delegates instead endorsed Omar Fateh, a 35-year-old socialist state Senator. Mr. Fateh is proposing rent control and more public housing, including with funding from 'a dedicated levy.' He says Minneapolis shouldn't be a 'playground for developers.' His stance on the homeless is to promise 'a compassionate approach to encampments,' including saying he'll work to 'ensure that residents have access to life-saving infrastructure like hand-washing stations, portable bathrooms, running water, safe needle disposal programs, and storage for personal belongings.' He says voters want a bold mayor who 'will end the cycle of the Minneapolis Police Department's (MPD) violence and brutality that has held our city captive for so many years.' In Mr. Fateh's view, 'over 47% of calls to MPD can be diverted to non-police responders.' He wants to reduce crime by investing in 'upstream solutions' on poverty and mental health. No surprise, Mr. Fateh is 'passionately pro-labor,' and he pledges to 'work collaboratively with the unions representing City employees to ensure workers get fair contracts.' But if Mr. Fateh joins the public unions on their side of the bargaining table, who will represent residents and taxpayers?


CBS News
a minute ago
- CBS News
McCormick, Fetterman and HUD Secretary Turner tour Edgar Thompson works plant
U.S. Sens. Dave McCormick and John Fetterman joined Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner on a tour of the Edgar Thompson works plant in Braddock on Friday. Fetterman, a Democrat, and McCormick, a Republican, emerged from a tour of the 150-year-old plant touting its recent sale to Japan-based Nippon Steel. "This Nippon-U.S. Steel partnership is great for our country, it's great for Pennsylvania," McCorcmick said. "This way of life now has been effectively guaranteed now for decades to come," Fetterman said. The long-awaited partnership between U.S. Steel and Nippon Steel was finalized on June 18, with Nippon Steel promising to invest $14 billion into U.S. operations, with $2.4 billion set aside for operations in the Mon Valley. The partnership is expected to create more than 100,000 jobs throughout the U.S., including in the Mon Valley. "You know when you create jobs, there's a housing need," Turner said. Braddock is replete with rundown and blighted buildings and homes. Turner said the sale will go a long way in solving that issue. Turner and McCormick specifically say one thing stands in the way. "When you have burdensome regulations, it cripples development, it cripples building," Turner said. "It's all about supply, it's all about reducing regulations," McCormick said. "And that's going to be a big boost in supply. When there's a big boost in supply, people are going to be able to afford it." Nippon says it will not cut production and honor present union contracts for the next 10 years. In May, however, United Steel Workers International President David McCall released a statement on Nippon's promises, saying: "Issuing press releases and making political speeches is easy. Binding commitments are hard. The devil is always in the details. "Our members know from decades of negotiating contracts: Trust nothing until you see it in writing."


Fox News
a minute ago
- Fox News
‘The Five': Trump's aim to clean up US cities, make them safe is ‘not too much to ask'
'The Five' co-hosts consider President Donald Trump's focus on making American cities safer and addressing the homeless crisis in blue cities.