If artificial intelligence tools struggle to find official guidance, too often the answers they generate are wrong. Governments need to make their information readable by machines as well as humans.
Obamacare isn’t the reason they’re going up. It’s state policies.
No one wants to pay for natural disasters. But even small-government proponents may have to accept increased federal involvement.
Over a generation, there’s been a sea change in the way cities, states and the feds deal with each other.
A 75-year-old highway project offers clues to solving a critical present-day problem.
If his current proposals succeed, his supporters are in for a rude awakening.
Suddenly it’s the left that’s talking about defying federal law. The reversal raises a host of questions.
Much of what the new administration wants to change was built by Lyndon B. Johnson.
The president-elect and his Republican Congress will surely change health care -- but first, they have to decide how.
As the first governor on the job in almost half a century, either one of them will present new opportunities for the White House.
The cereal’s new look shows how and why one small state could change the rules nationwide.
Presidential contenders have plans for making college more affordable. But it's an issue not easily solved from the Oval Office.
When government lets the market fix policy problems, it often fails.
The strategy that's improved the management of fires has, paradoxically, made it harder to know who’s really in charge of putting them out.
In the decade since the storm, the federal government's involvement in disaster relief has risen -- and so have tensions with localities.
A recent incident involving Double Stuf Oreos highlights the debate about how much supervision of children is too much.
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