Isai Lopez, the Silicon Valley Young Republicans' president in 2022, shares key challenges youth-serving orgs face in the heart of the Tech Capital. Part of an Opp Now exclusive series on engaging conservative youth—in a poignantly progressive pocket of the U.S.
Read MoreLocal Libertarian John Inks—formerly Mountain View mayor and two-term councilmember—breaks down San Jose's brash support of ACA 1. Inks predicts a wave of costly housing-related taxes moving forward, and wonders why SJ gov't isn't stepping up better to protect residents' voices. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MoreCA'ns will vote next year whether to pass the Justice for Renters Act, which would reallow rent control ordinances statewide (they've done so well in SJ, right?). Here, Daniel Yukelson—executive director of the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles (AAGLA)—pinpoints why “stabilizing” landlords' rents would drive up housing scarcity, making home offerings lower quality and rent much costlier for already-struggling tenants. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MoreDoubling down on a failed housing strategy. Higher rents. Higher cost of living. These are the results county GOP chief Shane Patrick Connolly sees emanating from SJ City Council's and state legislators' moves to subvert the popular tax safeguards in Prop 13. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MoreCommunity political watcher Tobin Gilman recently broke the story of how SJ's City Council has overwhelmingly approved recommendations about State legislation that would, in Gilman's terms, constitute a "Stealth Tax Hike Agenda" for San Joseans. Pat Waite, head of Citizens for Fiscal Responsibility, comments and finds the council's decision-making misguided and counterproductive—and the latest in a history of efforts to circumvent Prop 13. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MoreCalifornia ACA 1, given an official thumbs-up by some city councils like San Jose's, would make it easier to advance bonds and special taxes for affordable housing projects by changing the required two-thirds supermajority to a 55% majority. Here, Mark Hinkle—local Libertarian officeholder and SVTA's president—argues that ACA 1 doesn't represent what SJ voters want, given overwhelming Prop 13 support, and would diminish living standards. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MoreIt's no secret: California High-Speed Rail's expenses balloon, but its completion date keeps getting kicked down the road. Is it time the U.S. gov't throws in their hunk of cash? Opp Now asked registered Libertarian presidential candidates Joshua Smith, Mike ter Maat, Jacob Hornberger, Hugo Valdez-Garcia, and Beau Lindsey for their exclusive takes on a federal HSR bailout.
Read MoreA group of Silicon Valley plutocrats has announced their plan to construct a city from scratch in the Montezuma Hills, northeast of San Francisco by an hour. Meanwhile, public policy professor Joel Fox speculates that the threat of a modern Elysium might prompt breakthrough solutions for SF's crime, homelessness, and business closures. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MoreOverly broad, antiquated fire egress regulations drive up home costs in San Jose. Meanwhile, many European countries don't even bother with multiple staircase requirements, given modern-day fire risk mitigation strategies. It’s time for reform, says Market Urbanist's Scott Beyer. An Opp Now exclusive.
Read MoreFoundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) litigation fellow Jessie Appleby discusses Palsgaard v. Christian in this Opp Now exclusive: how local community colleges' required DEI statements force State-sanctioned speech, and why they should be challenged by folks of all political stripes.
Read MoreFormer political strategist Richard Maher is president of the San Francisco Young Republicans and has worked to build the once-flatlining social club into a robust, engaged conservative community. Opp Now exclusively asked Maher to unpack the tricks of the trade when it comes to reaching youth who question the ascendant hard-Left worldview—especially when many are U-Hauling it elsewhere.
Read MoreArizona's public colleges just bid adieu to requiring DEI statements in the application process; and two CA lawsuits could change things up for local professors. SJSU Anthropology prof and National Association of Scholars board member Elizabeth Weiss breaks down these developments—and what's turning people off the once-universally lauded DEI statements. An Opp Now exclusive.
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