We believe every Californian should have the opportunity to flourish.

Listen: Unleash the whackin’

Listen: Unleash the whackin’

Listen: Unleash the whackin’ New episode of Radio Free California Podcast is out In their weekly podcast for National Review, California Policy Center President Will Swaim and Board Member David Bahnsen discuss the case Newsom and his allies are building against the recall. Hint: It’s focused more on Republican challenger Caitlyn Jenner than it is...

By Will Swaim

UPDATE: Southern California parents secure major victory over teachers union

UPDATE: Southern California parents secure major victory over teachers union

Students returning to class thanks to parent protests Students in the Desert Sands Unified School District will get to return to school four days a week after parent protests forced the board of education to reconsider a recent decision that would have kept them locked out of the classroom.  Last week, the Desert Sands Unified...

By Chantal Lovell

Defining an omni-shambles: California’s unemployment agency

Defining an omni-shambles: California’s unemployment agency

By: Thomas Buckley, Guest Contributor The organization’s crisis response has opened a window into how it truly feels about the public it serves On January 1, 2021, 1.4 million Californians woke up with something much worse than a hangover. They found a surprise email from the state’s Employment Development Department telling them that their unemployment...

By Thomas Buckley

Awakening to woke

Awakening to woke

The mainstreaming of Marxism is meeting resistance from anti-woke warriors, but more people must lose their fear and fight back. Here in California, the woke train rolls merrily along.  If AB 101 passes in its current version, a one-semester high school course in ethnic studies will be mandated starting in the 2029–2030 school year. Each...

By Larry Sand

Fixing K-12 education in California

Fixing K-12 education in California

Supporters of education reform in California have never had a bigger opportunity than they do right now. In the past year, more parents than ever witnessed the selfish overreach of the teachers’ unions, at the same time millions of them experienced creative educational solutions that bypass the traditional public school system.  Meanwhile, an activist army...

By Edward Ring

The key to affordable housing? More suburbs

The key to affordable housing? More suburbs

An article just published in City Journal, “Is Texas’s Affordable Housing Endangered,” describes how housing prices in Texas are becoming unaffordable. The article notes how the average home price in the Austin metropolitan area has doubled in just 10 years. In the Dallas suburbs a decade ago, more than 50 percent of homes sold for...

By Edward Ring

Newsletter(4/23): If You Can’t Beat Them, Join Them

Newsletter(4/23): If You Can’t Beat Them, Join Them

While the vast majority of California public schools remained off-limits to students this school year, a bright light has flickered in the darkness: charter schools. Mostly outside the iron grasp of unions that have kept traditional public schools shuttered, charter schools acted quickly to educate students throughout the pandemic. Their nimbleness and ability to focus...

By Chantal Lovell

Listen: Dog returns to its own vomit

Listen: Dog returns to its own vomit

New episode of Radio Free California Podcast is out In their weekly podcast for National Review, California Policy Center President Will Swaim and Board Member David Bahnsen consider new state legislation that will lay the groundwork for a global real estate crisis — just 12 years after the Great Recession!  In other news, David and...

By Chantal Lovell

Teachers union: members too exhausted for 4-day-a-week school

Teachers union: members too exhausted for 4-day-a-week school

Kids in Desert Sands Unified School District will remain locked out of the classroom for most of the week, because members of the union calling the shots are too “exhausted” to return to work. Earlier this week, the district rejected a proposal that would have allowed students on campus four days a week after the...

By Chantal Lovell

Solving California’s urban water scarcity

Solving California’s urban water scarcity

A study by the Public Policy Institute of California in 2019 found that per capita urban water use in the state has dropped consistently over the years, from 231 gallons per day in 1990 to 180 gallons per day in 2010. It dropped again to 146 gallons per day during the drought in 2015.  This...

By Edward Ring

Dear California: The winter wave is over. Let’s reopen.

Dear California: The winter wave is over. Let’s reopen.

Think back to late December. Christmas was approaching and the news in California was getting grimmer by the day. California had one of the highest COVID case rates of any state. Just a month earlier, Governor Newsom locked down the state yet again. Hospitals were packed and there was a shortage of body bags. There...

By Brandon Ristoff

Winning a war of attrition against government unions

Winning a war of attrition against government unions

Anyone involved in state or local politics in California soon realizes that government unions are the most powerful special interest in the state. From time to time, as the ride-share behemoths proved in spectacular fashion last November with Proposition 22, corporations will defy the unions on very specific issues. But by and large California’s corporations...

By Edward Ring

The Superintendent Cannot Choose Your Doctor Either

The Superintendent Cannot Choose Your Doctor Either

Imagine a world where a bureaucrat can choose the one person with whom you share your greatest confidences, personal information, goals and vulnerabilities. Imagine a world where that same bureaucrat can use that vital information to control you, invade your privacy and harm your well-being. Imagine a world where this cruel hoax is government-funded.  I...

By Greg Rolen