As we at CFIF often highlight, strong intellectual property (IP) rights - including patent rights -…
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Senate Must Support Strong Patent Rights, Not Erode Them

As we at CFIF often highlight, strong intellectual property (IP) rights - including patent rights - constitute a core element of "American Exceptionalism" and explain how we became the most inventive, prosperous, technologically advanced nation in human history.  Our Founding Fathers considered IP so important that they explicitly protected it in the text of Article I of the United States Constitution.

Strong patent rights also explain how the U.S. accounts for an incredible two-thirds of all new lifesaving drugs introduced worldwide.

Elected officials must therefore work to protect strong IP and patent rights, not undermine them.   Unfortunately, several anti-patent bills currently before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee this week threaten to do exactly…[more]

April 02, 2025 • 08:29 PM

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Why Would Any Legit Dem Presidential Prospect Jump Into This Mess? Print
By David Harsanyi
Friday, July 19 2024
Anyone who gets in now would be compelled to make a convincing case in a condensed time frame, relying on Biden's terrible campaign people, in what is likely the most tumultuous presidential election in more than a century.

The Left's efforts to push a fragile Joe Biden out of the presidential race are probably hitting an apex around now, as Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer reportedly showed up at the old man's house to "forcefully" ask him to pack it up. Many Democrats are now looking around for political saviors. I'm not sure it's going to be that easy.

Why would any legitimate presidential prospect  outside Vice President Kamala Harris  consider jumping into the unprecedented chaos of 2024? Right now, Govs. Gretchen Whitmer or Josh Shapiro, or whoever, can sit back for the next four years, bolster his or her credentials governing purple states, build national profiles, reach out to key constituencies, and put together organizations in important states. Anyone who gets in now would be compelled to make a convincing case in a condensed time frame, relying on Biden's terrible campaign people, in what is likely the most tumultuous presidential election in more than a century.

For another thing, one would need to leapfrog the very first black/Asian American/woman vice president in history for the nomination. Is any white Democrat with a bright political future going to rely on a flash anarchic convention to sideline Harris? I've never met the woman, but the vice president doesn't seem to have a temperament that would take kindly to being shoved out of the picture. And, to be fair, her only real job is to step in for the president if he's unable to perform his duties. Democrat voters, twice, picked her for that task.

Then, even if a potential candidate could pull it off, rather than brandishing some fresh and tested political message, that candidate would be thrust into the role of defending the administration's unpopular record on the border or economy and so on. Does any politician who's built up credentials as an effective governor want to spend the next three months scaremongering about Project 2025 and the end of democracy? Seems unlikely to me. But I guess you can never know.

If Democrats lose the White House this year, the Left's revisionist history is going to blame the debate debacle for sinking Biden's reelection efforts. And, indeed, the day the media's gaslighting of the president's decline was exposed, it changed the dynamics of the race. The president, though, was already struggling to get his message out and running behind Donald Trump on virtually every important issue. Biden almost certainly pushed for an early debate to reset the race. Boy, that was a disastrous mistake. If he had waited, the media would have continued hiding his failing mental acuity until the campaign ran out the clock.

As far as Shapiro goes, it should be noted that the Democratic Party is not exactly a welcoming place for Jews right now. The party's pro-Hamas faction, which Biden had been trying to mollify since Oct. 7, 2023, is still here. Navigating that issue won't be easy. With the ejection of Hamas apologist Jamaal Bowman from Congress  and hopefully Cori Bush  the dynamics might change in 2028. If Dems take a beating  and I'm not as sold on that prospect as others seem to be  perhaps Democrats will try to moderate the national ticket.

Sitting it out comes with some risk, of course. Perhaps Kamala Harris wins. I happen to believe she's a weaker candidate than Joe Biden right now. We never really know how the electorate is going to react. In most ways, though, waiting until 2028 makes a lot more sense for any accomplished Democrat.


David Harsanyi is a senior editor at The Federalist. Harsanyi is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of five books  the most recent, "Eurotrash: Why America Must Reject the Failed Ideas of a Dying Continent." 

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