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Get the latest news and research from Badger Institute
- Post-Kirk assassination, Wisconsin needs to teach difference between words and bullets, says prof
- School-bus Wi-Fi finally gets reined in while pandemic-era home internet subsidies only now dribble out
- Village’s hostility chases out restaurateur who bought derelict Door County resort
- Overwhelming demand for choice schools in Milwaukee drives massive philanthropy and big builds
- Kids who kill and maim
- Wisconsin can learn from neighbors’ disappearing-passenger blues
- Evers administration pigs out on livestock fees
- Tony Evers’ puzzlingly swift rejection of more education money
Browsing: Media
In January, Milwaukee County Sheriff David A. Clarke Jr. warned the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee of the increasing federalization of local police departments.
In a January article comparing the economic status of the black community in 52 of the nation’s largest metropolitan areas, policy expert Joel Kotkin ranked Atlanta and Washington, D.C., among cities with the most prosperous black populations and ranked Milwaukee dead last.
Tax-exempt institutions pay utility fees for their use of electricity and water. Shouldn’t a tax for their ownership of property be viewed in the same light?
Analysis shows the economic benefits of a right-to-work law.
Generational gaps in behavior are nothing new.
Like many families from the city, every summer while I was growing up, my family would pack up the car and take a trip to the hinterlands of Wisconsin.
In the past, climate change has been a wedge issue between conservatives and liberals, but that tide appears to be turning.
According to a WPRI poll, 62% of Wisconsinites somewhat or completely support a special needs voucher proposal, while 27% are somewhat or completely opposed.
Seventy-five parts per billion is a huge number when it comes to ground-level ozone pollution, says the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
One of the benefits of having 50 states, our so-called laboratories of democracy, is that we can examine different states’ policies and learn from them.
BY MIKE NICHOLS | Dec. 15, 2014 Many years ago, after taking a job as a young reporter at the old…
In 2012, Democratic candidates successfully sold the narrative that Republicans were waging a war against American women. Consequently, exit polls found a significant gender gap.
City is making progress on educational attainment, but not nearly enough.
Wisconsinites need to get used to the idea of electronic tolls on our freeways. It’s a free-market solution to an overwhelming problem: lack of cash to pay for modestly modern highways.
The headline in late October was a shocker: “Wisconsin business taxes rank 43rd” — seventh worst in the country.
I’m not wealthy, but I’m working on it.
By now, there’s enough mythology surrounding the patterns and trends exhibited by the millennial generation to overwhelm any researcher.
Raising the minimum wage would boost the wages of some workers, but it also would result in fewer jobs.
It’s amazing, the things we get worked up about — and the things we don’t.
Economists from Suffolk University’s Beacon Hill Institute for Public Policy have determined through economic modeling that Wisconsin would benefit long-term from further tax cuts. Yet, they’ve found, Wisconsin doesn’t just suffer from high taxes. It suffers from the wrong tax mix.