Abby McCloskey, The Dallas Morning News, September 1, 2016
"In this polarized election year, there is something that unites Republicans and Democrats: the desire to give American workers a pay raise. The big question is how."
Abby McCloskey, The Dallas Morning News, September 1, 2016
"In this polarized election year, there is something that unites Republicans and Democrats: the desire to give American workers a pay raise. The big question is how."
Abby McCloskey, The Blaze, August 16, 2016 (TV)
Discussing Trump, the economy, trade and immigration
Abby McCloskey, Forbes, July 26, 2016
"Clinton's efforts to double down on the Affordable Care Act, raise the minimum wage, ignore occupational licensing and raise taxes on working women would implicitly encourage even more women to leave the work force."
Abby McCloskey, National Review Online, July 21, 2016
"Hillary has rejected her husband’s New Democrat platform, which led to one of the most successful economic periods for American women. Free trade, fiscal responsibility, and welfare reform were followed by rising wages in the 1990s and by the highest labor-force participation rate among women ever reached in America: 60 percent in 1999. Instead, she has taken a page from President Obama’s playbook for economic growth, accepting as the new normal the weakest economic recovery since World War II. That means that Obama-era weakness would continue, which isn’t great for women (or men, for that matter)."
Abby McCloskey, Larry Kudlow Show, July 9, 2016 (RADIO)
Discussing yesterday's jobs report and supply-side tax reform
Abby McCloskey, Forbes, June 30, 2016
"America’s economy has all but sputtered to a standstill. GDP growth in the first quarter was an anemic 1.1%. After seven years of the Obama Administration, liberals have few people to blame but themselves. Which is why it is curious that some high-profile liberals are busy denouncing conservative economic policies to jumpstart the economy, such as tax cuts."
Abby McCloskey and Aparna Mathur, Forbes, May 25, 2016
"At first blush, the drop in workforce participation rates seem to have similarly impacted men and women. The employment rate for American females in their prime working years, 25-54, has dropped from 74.9% in April, 2000 to 70.8% in April 2016. For similarly aged men, participation rates dropped from 89% to 84.9% during the same time period. Yet relative to their peers globally, American women may have prematurely plateaued in their labor force participation rates."
Abby McCloskey, National Review Magazine, May 23, 2016
"A majority of Republican voters (55 percent) support paid leave for new parents, as do two-thirds of the American public, according to a recent AP-GfK poll. Instead of shying away from paid leave, conservatives should articulate the shortcomings of the Democratic approach and present America with a better alternative."
Abby McCloskey, Ripon Forum, April 2016 edition
"Since 1960, the share of households headed by single parents in the United States has more than tripled. According to the Pew Research Center, 25 percent of households (8.6 million) were headed by single mothers in 2011. Another 6 percent of households (2.6 million) were headed by single fathers."
Abby McCloskey, Forbes, April 7, 2016
"The logical outgrowth of the victim mentality is that we need to be protected and guarded and turn inward. We can no longer afford the freedom and openness and international cooperation that marked America in the past, and arguably were the source of our greatness to begin with.."
Jim Tankersley, Washington Post, February 26, 2016
"“The Obama administration made things worse than they needed to be, by prioritizing a progressive agenda over what the economy actually needed,” said Abby McCloskey, a middle-class focused conservative economist who advised GOP presidential candidates Rick Perry and Jeb Bush before each man dropped out of the race."
Abby McCloskey, The Federalist, December 29, 2015
"The majority of Americans (60 percent) now believe the federal government is too powerful—the highest in polling history, aside from 2013, according to a recent Gallup poll. That belief has grown stronger among Democrats and Independents under President Obama. During Obama’s first term, 59 percent of Independents and 24 percent of Democrats thought that was the case. During Obama’s second term, those numbers grew to 64 percent and 37 percent, respectively.
Abby McCloskey, Forbes, October 28, 2015
"In an election cycle that has focused little on policy reforms, Jeb’s plan is a refreshing reminder that some candidates are actually running to govern and solve our nation’s biggest problems."
Philip Rucker, Washington Post, December 9, 2014
"The days of briefings -- which typically include multiple roundtable and lunch or dinner -- are being organized by Jeff Miller, Perry's top political strategist, and Abby McCloskey, a Texas-based economist who previously worked for the American Enterprise Institute."
Patricia Cohen and Nelson D. Schwartz, The New York Times, June 19, 2015
"As the campaign heats up, some experts are signing on with specific candidates. Abby McCloskey, former program director of economic policy at the American Enterprise Institute, for example, is now policy director for Mr. Perry."
Bob Davis, Wall Street Journal, February 11, 2015
From Wire Reports, The Dallas Morning News, June 7, 2015
Steven Yaccino and Mark Halperin, Bloomberg, April 20, 2015
Katie Glueck, Politico, June 4, 2015
"Abby McCloskey is policy director. She was previously the program director of economic policy at the conservative American Enterprise Institute as well as director of research at the Financial Services Roundtable."
Athan Koppel and Colleen McCain Nelson, Wall Street Journal, June 3, 2015
"Texas, contrary to public image, is not all about oil," McCloskey said.