The Maine Turnpike Authority was never a model of good government in the past, but its recent handling of a toll increase is making it one.
Editorials
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Medicare comes to the fore as campaign issue
Until this week, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney had sought to make the election a referendum about just one thing: President Barack Obama’s handling of the economy.
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Evenings seem empty without Olympic efforts
You’d think a 17-day Olympiad couldn’t stretch long enough to be habit-forming, but this week, the evenings seem awfully empty.
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Myths at heart of both fiscal solutions
The 2012 presidential election will present voters with contrasting visions of government, brought into sharper focus by Mitt Romney’s selection of House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan as his running mate. At the heart of each vision, however, is a dangerous myth that undercuts the potential for serious policy discussion.
OUR OPINION: Depth of feelings against highway underestimated
As supporters peel off the East-West Highway feasibility study, it’s important for everyone to focus on the real problem.
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Truth about voter fraud
Ostensible justification for a spate of Republican-sponsored voter ID laws — which would require voters to present government-issued photo ID at the polls — has been the threat of voter fraud, specifically, in-person voter impersonation. It has seemed likely, given the absence of evidence of such crimes, that the threat was overstated. Now we know for sure: Such fraud virtually never takes place.
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Park designation fitting for development of bomb
The Manhattan Project — the U.S. government’s wartime push to develop an atomic bomb — ranks among the most significant chapters in the history of the American Century.
OUR OPINION: Romney’s veep pick has radical view of future
This week, many Americans are getting their first look at Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, Mitt Romney’s choice to be the nation’s vice president.
Syria’s nightmare is far from over
Syria’s civil war is at a crucial point following the defection to the rebels of Prime Minister Riad Hijab and new reported attempted defections.
Don’t play games with US power grid
Everybody and his brother — the Sierra Club, the natural gas industry, the solar industry, the wind industry, President Barack Obama and Lisa Jackson of the Environmental Protection Agency — want to design the nation’s energy mix and the nation’s electrical system.