The Unprecedented Mass Exit From the Left

 
 
Aug 24, 2018
 

Happy Friday from Washington, where the EPA's move to shine light on the science behind regulations gains relevance as a court tells the government to ban an insecticide. Kevin Mooney reports. In Iowa, Mollie Tibbetts' fellow students tell our Rachel del Guidice how they're coming to grips with her apparent murder. Plus: Genevieve Wood on some tight-lipped opponents of  the Supreme Court nominee, Jeff Walyus on the left's growing "walk away" problem, John Malcolm and Brett Tolman on the toughness behind prison reform, and Kelsey Harkness and Ginny Montalbano on some problematic developments. Enjoy the weekend.

 
 
 
Commentary
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Many people leaving, dubbed WalkAways, have said it was easier to come out as gay than to come out as a conservative or libertarian.
News
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Students weigh in on the suspect's immigration status, how men are taught to treat women, and the media attention on the case.
News
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The EPA's "Strengthening Transparency in Regulatory Science" rule would require the agency to publish the scientific data behind regulations so that the information would be available for public scrutiny.
News
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When we took our cameras to the event, none of the "working women" or other activists would talk with us and explain their opposition to Kavanaugh.
Analysis
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The transgender movement, like so many others, looks to federal courts for major policy breakthroughs. We talk to Alliance Defending Freedom's Gary McCaleb, who has perhaps the most close-up perspective imaginable when it comes to gender and the law.
Analysis
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This week on "Problematic Women": First lady Melania Trump's cyberbullying summit gets buried in a busy news week, and a prominent #MeToo advocate who accused Harvey Weinstein of rape is accused of sexual assault herself.
News
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"I took control of the Department of Justice the day I was sworn in, which is why we have had unprecedented success at effectuating the president's agenda," says Attorney General Jeff Sessions.
Commentary
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Evidence-based reform practices in states such as Texas, Georgia, Ohio, and South Carolina have for the most part also proven successful in terms of saving taxpayer dollars while still resulting in falling crime rates.
 
     
 
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