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  • November 4, 2010
    New York Post
    Bernanke’s Bond Buy a Likely Bust
    … already imposed capital controls to slow such inflows, and some East Asian countries are contemplating similar moves. The Fed’s policy was widely anticipated and has already driven down the dollar’s worth measured in foreign currencies (the dollar’s …
    By Gerald P. O’Driscoll Jr.
  • November 4, 2010
    Huffington Post
    Will Anti-Interventionist Congressional Republicans Please Stand Up
    … is that the tendency of those Republican Tea Party members of Congress who are less inclined to focus on foreign policy issues would be to yield to the guidance and pressure coming from the leading Republican foreign‐​policy activists and …
    By Leon T. Hadar
  • November 4, 2010
    Philadelphia Inquirer
    Will the Tea Tempest Storm the Pentagon?
    Some hawks are getting defensive about the budget. With a number of tea party‐​backed candidates victorious and on their way to Washington, there is much speculation about how they might affect foreign policy. “It’s hard to divine because …
    By Christopher A. Preble and John Samples
  • November 3, 2010
    Blog
    Ballot Initiatives Provide Underappreciated Election-Night Victories
    Last week, I highlighted nine ballot initiatives that were worth watching because of their policy implications and/​or their role is showing whether voters wanted more or less freedom. The results, by and large, are very encouraging. Let’s take …
    By Daniel J. Mitchell
  • November 3, 2010
    Blog
    What the 2010 Election Will Mean for Trade
    … in the U.S. House. None of them ran away from their records on trade. The key change for trade policy will be the switch of the House to Republican control in January. Democratic House leaders were generally hostile to …
    By Daniel Griswold
  • November 3, 2010
    Blog
    What Spending Should the GOP Cut?
    … pushing for specific cuts. Ronald Reagan was able to make substantial cuts to state grants in the early 1980s because policymakers had discussed such reforms throughout the 1970s. Republicans in the mid‐​1990s were able to reform welfare because of …
    By Chris Edwards
  • November 3, 2010
    National Interest (Online)
    Drifting into Trouble in the Western Pacific
    … that the Chinese government considers sensitive. In her address to the ASEAN conference, she avoided mentioning most of the main policy differences between the United States and China, including the North Korean nuclear issue and the controversy surrounding Beijing’s …
    By Ted Galen Carpenter
  • November 3, 2010
    Huffington Post
    Netanyahu and Obama
    … kind of presidential statement misconstrues the power of the presidency. Although we have become accustomed to presidential control of foreign policy, the Founders had a more constrained view of executive authority. Alexander Hamilton noted in Federalist No. 75 that “the …
    By Stanley Kober
  • November 3, 2010
    Politico.com
    GOP Won on Economy, So Focus on It
    … the election, voters and the activists go back to their normal lives, but organized interests redouble their efforts to influence policymakers. The people who want something from government hire lobbyists, make political contributions and otherwise do all they can to …
    By David Boaz
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