The Tennessee General Assembly recently passed important legislation to repeal the state’s Certificate…
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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
Election Results for Candidates Profiled by CFIF
By Ashton Ellis
Wednesday, November 03 2010
Election Night 2010 decided the fate of several conservative candidates whom CFIF followed this year.  It also witnessed a referendum on activist judges and a job-killing environmental policy.  After a year-long campaign, here are the results.    Kris Kobach – Kobach (R-KS) won a resounding victory for Kansas Secretary of State with a mandate to eliminate voter fraud.  Earlier this year Kobach burst onto the national scene as one of the primary drafters of Arizona’s SB 1070; the tough anti-illegal immigration law that the Obama Administration is challenging. …
 
2008 – 2010: From “Yes We Can” to “Shove It” in Two Short Years
How things have changed since election night 2008, just two short years ago. From Chicago to Cairo,…
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The Costs of Over-Regulation
There is a difference between protecting people and micromanaging to the point of absurdity.  Hot…
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Obama Betrays a Dream, Disappoints a Nation
In American politics, nothing is permanent. On election night this year, that should be the thought running…
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Where Do We Go From Here? An Immediate Agenda for a New Republican Congress
With only a little over a week until Election Day, Democratic hopes that November 2 will bring something…
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New York Times Survey: Tea Partiers Actually Better-Educated, Less “Afraid” Than the General Public
Preening liberals are simultaneously irritating but ironically amusing whenever they expose their own…
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Venezuela, Iran & Russia: A VIRUS to American Foreign Policy
What do you call an axis of authoritarian regimes united by a rejection of the United States and free…
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Latest IRS Data: Wealthier Americans Again Paid More than Their “Fair Share”
“The rich are not paying their fair share.”  So said Hillary Clinton earlier this year…
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The Cheney Way: Why Washington Needs More Anti-Heroes
“Dick Cheney is out of the hospital and back to raking in money defending torture and pre-emptive…
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The Scourge of Public Employee Compensation
If you’ve been looking for hard numbers to support the argument that the American public sector…
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“Cool It” – Bjorn Lomborg’s New Cinematic Rebuke to Global Warming Alarmists
Recent events prove that orthodox environmentalists can be a really hateful, vindictive bunch. …
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Notable Quote   
 
"Some Gen Zers -- ages 14 to 29 -- are ditching social media in pursuit of better mental health, Axios' Rebecca Falconer reports.It's part of a wider digital detox movement away from screens and toward analog options. Research suggests that social media use is waning -- and that more people are embracing app-blocking products and 'dumbphones' that lack social media apps."Read the entire article here…[more]
 
 
— Mike Allen, Axios
 
Liberty Poll   

In the next five years, do you believe that your personal job will be threatened or enhanced by the continued, inevitable development of AI?