The members of The Wall Street Journal's editorial board discuss the hot topics in today's news.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
The latest city to confront bankruptcy and how it got there.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
The Magnitsky Act is a worthy successor to Jackson-Vanik.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Ronald Reagan understood history and its lesson that appeasing dictators never works for long.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Italy's former prime minister turns populist euroskeptic. Too bad he never delivered on promised reforms.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Citizens flee on rafts. But environmentalists know better.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Jeffrey Goldberg interviews Mohamed Morsy, now Egypt's president, on the rightful place of Christians and women in his country.
The story of a forward-looking scholar who showed that the U.S., in its formation and ultimate identity, owed a debt to Spain as well as to England. Gerard Helferich reviews "Herbert Eugene Bolton."
Commentary
1993: David Rivkin: Health Care Reform v. the Founders
Review & Outlook
March 2, 2010: Back to the ObamaCare Future
March 10, 2010: The ObamaCare Crossroads
April 2, 2010: ObamaCare and the Constitution
September 10, 2010: ObamaCare 'Amnesia'
October 26, 2010: Big Insurance, Big Medicine
December 22, 2010: Sebelius's Price Controls
December 23, 2010: PolitiFiction
March 22, 2012: Liberty and ObamaCare
March 28, 2012: ObamaCare Opening Day
March 29, 2012: A Constitutional Awakening
March 30, 2012: The ObamaCare Reckoning
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Kimberley A. Strassel
When the House votes to hold the attorney general in contempt of Congress, how many Democrats will make the Obama administration accountable for its stonewalling?
Subscriber Content Read Preview
When asked, shareholders seem happy to richly reward disciplined risk-taking.
A leading opponent of same-sex marriage defects.
Europe is better at making rules than following them.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
A relic of 19th-century popular entertainment, the historical accuracy and artistic value of "The Panorama of the Monumental Grandeur of the Mississippi Valley" are beside the point.
By Marcus A. Winters
From the City Journal
Is local self-sufficiency the worst thing you can do for the environment? Stephen Budiansky on new food books, including one that makes this counterintuitive case.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Kimberley A. Strassel
When the House votes to hold the attorney general in contempt of Congress, how many Democrats will make the Obama administration accountable for its stonewalling?
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Pepper...and Salt
From the Media Research Center
A transcript of the weekend's program:
If ObamaCare goes, what then? Plus the left panics about Obama's campaign, and Chicago's mayor takes on the teachers union. Tune in this weekend for more: FOX News Channel, Saturday 2 p.m. and 11 p.m. ET.
The Journal Editorial Report Podcast.
(This iTunes link is compatible with Internet Explorer 7, Safari and Firefox browsers.)
We speak for free markets and free people, the principles, if you will, marked in the watershed year of 1776 by Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence and Adam Smith's "Wealth of Nations." So over the past century and into the next, the Journal stands for free trade and sound money; against confiscatory taxation and the ukases of kings and other collectivists; and for individual autonomy against dictators, bullies and even the tempers of momentary majorities.