Today's Top Stories

AFL-CIO voting scorecard reflects sharp ideological split

As might be expected, the AFL-CIO voting records for the final year, 2010, of the Democratic-run 111th Congress reflected the overall partisan and ideological split on Capitol Hill. The Democratic columns in the House voting table were a sea of blue “yes” checkmarks and the Republicans in that same chart were a similar sea of red “no” X symbols. Seeing a lawmaker going against the grain was rare.

Catholic bishops, Jewish group strongly support workers' rights

Backing and reinforcing a position first taken by the Archbishop of Milwaukee, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a strong statement supporting workers’ rights -- notably collective bargaining rights -- on Feb. 24. Not only is refusing to bargain wrong, but “it is equally a mistake to marginalize or dismiss unions as impediments to economic growth,” wrote Bishop Stephen Blaire, chair of the conference’s committee on domestic justice in his letter.

Scapegoats in Wisconsin

Why is the middle class demonized when Wall Street is the problem?

We are in the third winter of the recession; 26 million Americans are out of work, cannot find full-time work, or have given up looking for work, and $11 trillion in household wealth has vanished. But as winter turns to spring, there is an evolving perspective on the crisis, shifting from an attempt to identify the causes to blaming the victims -- as if detectives had removed the smoking guns from the perpetrators’ hands and arrested the corpses.

Really Bad Reporting in Wisconsin: Who 'Contributes' to Public Workers' Pensions?

When it comes to improving public understanding of tax policy, nothing has been more troubling than the deeply flawed coverage of the Wisconsin state employees' fight over collective bargaining. Economic nonsense is being reported as fact in most of the news reports on the Wisconsin dispute, the product of a breakdown of skepticism among journalists multiplied by their lack of understanding of basic economic principles.

Clayman: The Daily’s Free Trial Run Will Continue

News Corp.‘s The Daily launched Feb. 2 with a two-week free trial sponsored by Verizon, ostensibly enough time to give potential subscribers a full taste. But launch glitches that stretched out for a week kept a lot of those potential subscribers from getting a good picture of the News Corp iPad app. The first update came with extensions -- and now the publisher says the free trial extensions will continue for several more weeks, at least.

Media Ownership Rules Go to Court

Ppublic interest advocates presented oral arguments today before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in a case challenging the Federal Communications Commission’s 2007 decision to lift the 35-year-old ban on newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership. The FCC action came despite overwhelming public opposition from across the country and the political spectrum and in spite of evidence that more media competition – not more media concentration – will provide Americans with the local news and information they need and want.

Pay to Play

Newspaper publishers and executives these days can be divided into three groups: First, there are those who charge readers to view at least some of their content on computers as well as smart phones or tablet devices like the iPad. Second, there are those who are thinking about doing just that. The third group? Executives who are watching the first two.

As Goes Wisconsin... So Goes the Nation

It's good to remember that America's most prosperous time -- the period from the 1950s to the '70s -- was also when its trade-union movement and its middle class were strongest. That was not a coincidence: the rights and wages won by workers in the 1930s created a consumer class eager to buy every product, from homes to hula hoops, American capitalism could produce. But there are some very good reasons governors of both parties are trying to limit the power of public employees' unions.

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