The Pull of Populism
In year two, the Trump administration drifts back toward its campaign-season promises.
In year two, the Trump administration drifts back toward its campaign-season promises.
(Wed, 14 Feb 2018) Solar photovoltaic (PV) module imports into the United States have increased significantly in recent years and represent a sizable portion of installed solar capacity. In 2016, U.S. imports of solar modules measured in direct current (DC) totaled 13 gigawatts (GWDC)âup from 2 GWDC in 2010âwith two-thirds of 2016 imports coming from Malaysia, China, and South Korea.
One reader calls the budget a “profligate spending spree.” Another says that explains why the president “filed for bankruptcy so many times.”
A lukewarm response by potential donors, including the United States, at a fund-raising conference threatens efforts to stabilize the war-torn country.
In two early tweets, Mr. Trump said a March deadline to protect young immigrants would be the “last chance,” and suggested that Democrats should come to a deal on his infrastructure proposal.
(Tue, 13 Feb 2018) Hawaii has the highest residential electricity prices in the United States, averaging 27.5 cents per kilowatthour (kWh) in 2016âmore than twice the national average. However, residential customers in four states spent more per household for electricity that year: South Carolina, Alabama, Connecticut, and Maryland.
What happened to all that talk about sticking up for working people?
The president’s $200 billion plan recasts the federal government as a minority stakeholder in the nation’s new infrastructure projects.
His infrastructure “plan” is an obvious scam. But why didn’t he offer something legit?
The White House released a proposed budget that is largely irrelevant, given Congress passed a spending bill last week that outlines priorities.