With fewer immigrant workers available on American farms, there is a risk of "supply shock-induced food shortages," the Labor Department says.
Plus: Air traffic controllers get mysteriously sick, California gubernatorial contenders can't answer basic questions, and ...
Next week, if the Supreme Court decides to reach the merits in the U.S. v. Ellingburg case, it should recognize that restitution to crime victims serves compensatory rather than penal purposes.
A new FinCEN rule forced small money services businesses to collect personal data on nearly every customer transaction. Lawsuits claim this violates the Fourth Amendment.
The people who did the targeting should be punished and, more importantly, have their toys taken away: no more secret ...
In fairness to Fadel, the Joint Economic Committee released a statement that the government shutdown had "impacted the ...
From State v. Every, decided by the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals yesterday, in an opinion by Justice John ...
Sometimes the state's rules require stores to cover almost the entire label of products—in places that don't even admit minors.
The Chicago City Council unanimously approved a $90 million settlement to resolve 176 lawsuits brought by 180 people who ...
The policy would slow innovation, reduce competitiveness, and leave American workers unprepared for the future.
Trilogy Metals will receive a $35.6 million "investment," and the federal government will now own a 10 percent stake in the company.
On the one hand, when politicians are asked by the press or individual voters are surveyed, support for new housing tends to look pretty good. Large majorities say housing costs are too high, and more ...