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
SEIU’s Andy Stern: A Budget Vulture Feasting on the Public’s Nest Eggs
By Ashton Ellis
Wednesday, March 10 2010
With annual federal budget deficits projected to top $1.6 trillion for the foreseeable future, President Barack Obama thinks appointing Andy Stern, head of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), to help create a plan to balance spending with revenue is a good idea.  Consider Stern’s qualifications.  He owns an Ivy League degree in education and urban planning, a history of socialist radicalism, and leads the second largest union in America.  He is also principally responsible for the unsustainable growth in public employee union membership and compensation. …
 
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Notable Quote   
 
"California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom is facing a series of political and policy challenges that critics argue amount to a string of late-stage setbacks for his administration that could damage his potential 2028 presidential run.Conservatives recently secured enough support to place a voter ID initiative on the fall ballot in California, which was an outcome that would have been unlikely in the…[more]
 
 
— Nicholas Ballasy, Just the News
 
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?