The Tennessee General Assembly recently passed important legislation to repeal the state’s Certificate…
CFIF on X CFIF on YouTube
CFIF Thanks Legislative Champions of Certificate of Need (CON) Reform in Tennessee

The Tennessee General Assembly recently passed important legislation to repeal the state’s Certificate of Need (CON) requirements for acute care hospitals and other critical healthcare services. Pending Governor Bill Lee’s signature, the bill paves the way for more choices and better-quality care for patients across the state.

CON laws compel hospitals and other healthcare providers to demonstrate a “need” for and to receive special government permission to build new facilities and offer certain new healthcare services. Not only is that approval process governed by a government board unaccountable to voters, but incumbent providers also get a say in whether new facilities are permitted to open or new services can be offered by competitors in their geographic footprint.

Simply…[more]

April 23, 2026 • 10:49 AM
The Midterms in Prospect: The Senate (Part 3)
By Troy Senik
Thursday, September 25 2014
Over the past two weeks, I’ve presented analysis of this year’s U.S. Senate races by region, with previous installments looking at contests in the West and the Midwest. This week’s edition begins an examination of elections in the South that will continue into next week (the fourth and final edition will also include a brief look at the Northeast). At first blush, it may seem strange that the South has enough competitive races to merit being split into two parts. After all, the region has a reputation for being more monochromatic than the West or the Midwest, both of which contain…
 
Report: Obama Admin Can’t Say How Much It Spends To Promote ObamaCare
A new Government Accountability Office report says the primary agency charged with ObamaCare’s…
Read more...
A New Inconvenient Truth: Antarctic Ice Levels Reach Record High
For global warming alarmists, the inconvenient truths just keep accumulating.  The unintentional…
Read more...
 
The Midterms in Prospect: The Senate (Part 2)
Last week, I began a three-part series on this fall’s midterm races for the U.S. Senate, with each…
Read more...
What to Hope for If GOP Controls Congress
Unless voters unexpectedly send Republican super-majorities to both chambers of Congress this November…
Read more...
 
The Midterms in Prospect: The Senate (Part 1)
In a two-part series earlier this year, I provided a preview of the midterm Senate races, examining which…
Read more...
Senate Democrats and Scorched-Earth Judicial Politics
Whereas Senate Democrats routinely employ scorched-Earth tactics in the realm of judicial politics, Senate…
Read more...
 
When Medicaid Reform Isn’t
In last week’s column, I explained why not all decisions by Republican governors to expand Medicaid…
Read more...
CFIF Star-Spangled Banner Quiz
Take our 14 Question Quiz to test your knowledge of our National Anthem. (Answer key may be found at…
Read more...
 
Rand Paul Changes His Tune as Public Opinion on Foreign Policy Shifts
Joe Biden uncloaked his fanciful inner hawk this week in response to escalating butchery in the Middle…
Read more...
Time to Make Congress Telecommute?
If you want a sign that America’s civic health is not yet in terminal decline, here you go: We…
Read more...
Notable Quote   
 
"Many people are familiar with the 'blue state exodus' over the past several years, but are they aware of the blue city business exodus?It might be one of the biggest economic stories in modern US history, and Democrats are trying to keep it as quiet as possible. There is a blood letting going on in blue cities; a financial disaster in the making. And, like most financial disasters, it will probably…[more]
 
 
— Tyler Durden, Zero Hedge
 
Liberty Poll   

Do you believe that the current U.S. policy of blockading and basically starving the economy of Iran is more effective than military strikes?