Common Sense Weekly
Welcome to Common Sense Weekly! This is the Commonwealth Foundation's weekly news roundup of policy issues being debated in Harrisburg and across Pennsylvania.
After 23 Years, Impact of 9/11 Flight 93 Crash Still Runs Deep
After two decades, the grief hasnât faded. For Gordon Felt, it will never go away.
Under clear blue skies Monday, Mr. Felt stood just a few hundred yards from where the 40 passengers and crew of Flight 93, including his brother Edward, lost their lives after thwarting a planned terrorist attack on the nationâs capital.
The New Jersey native travels to the Pennsylvania countryside, just outside of Shanksville, Somerset County, each year to honor his brotherâs legacy, forever tied to the tragedy of 9/11.
âYou don't recover and you don't want to,â Mr. Felt said. âI talk a lot about holding on to those memories, to that pain. You learn how to move forward, but you carry that with you.â
[link removed]
The Basic Economic Mistake Both Candidates Make
Poll after poll reveals whatâs on votersâ minds: Itâs the economy, stupid, as it was in 1992 when Bill ClinÂtonâs camÂpaign adÂviÂsor James CarÂville inÂvented the phrase. VotÂers conÂsisÂtently cite inÂflaÂtion as the most imÂporÂtant isÂsue afÂfectÂing our counÂtry.
EcoÂnomic fearÂmonÂgerÂing drives the diÂsasÂtrous polÂiÂcies both candidates propose in respone to voter concerns. And each canÂdiÂdate is guilty of blamÂing a booÂgeyÂman. For Kamala HarÂris, greedy corÂpoÂraÂtions are gougÂing cusÂtomÂers and rakÂing in profÂits. For DonÂald Trump, forÂeign govÂernÂments â priÂmarÂily China â conÂtrol the flow and pricÂing of conÂsumer goods into our counÂtry.
Under PresÂiÂdent Joe Biden, conÂsumer prices have inÂcreased 19.43%. The rate of inÂcreases may be slowÂing (folÂlowÂing the highÂest inÂflaÂtion in 40 years), but prices are still risÂing.
[link removed]
New Commonwealth Foundation Leader Will Continue Fight to Champion Education Choice
Education-reform leader Andrew Lewis
[link removed]
has been named the new president and CEO of the Commonwealth Foundation
[link removed]
, the Pennsylvania policy juggernaut considered one of the most successful and impactful of Americaâs state-based, pro-liberty, free-market think tanks.
A former member of the stateâs general assembly, Lewis will be leading the Keystone Stateâs formidable center-right policy nonprofit, whose output has broader implications as the swing state finds itself increasingly at the center of Electoral College politics.
The Commonwealth Foundation raises more than $10 million annually to promote a policy agenda prioritizing educational opportunity
[link removed]
, public-sector labor reform (which the organization also refers to as âpublic union democracy
[link removed]
â), fiscal responsibility, and improving Pennsylvaniaâs overall economic climate.
At the capital in Harrisburg, Commonwealth has doggedly spearheaded efforts in the past few years centered on expanding education choice, aggressively working to promote Education Opportunity Accounts, through which Lifeline Scholarships
[link removed]
would be used by students to find alternatives to low-achieving schools.
[link removed]
Pennsylvania Receives âDâ Grade for Pro-Union Policies from Commonwealth Foundation
Pennsylvania has received a grade of âDâ in one new ranking of states. However, not everyone considers this bad news.
After Labor Day, the Commonwealth Foundation âgradedâ states based on their labor laws. A handful of states in the South received an âA+.â States like Maryland and California received an âF.â
âThe defining aspect of this report is that we are looking at public-sector labor policy through the lens of workers and taxpayers rather than union executives like most other reports in this area do,â said Andrew Holman, a policy analyst at the Commonwealth Foundation.
[link removed]
âââââ
[link removed]
P.S. Do you have someone who may be interested in the Commonwealth Foundationâs work to write the next chapter in Americaâs future? Forward to a friend!
Unsubscribe
[link removed]
from Commonwealth Foundation emails.