Across Pennsylvania|News|
SCHERER: Credit Card Act Would Destroy Consumer Benefits
Credit card benefits are under threat due to the possible resurrection of the Credit Card Competition Act of 2022.

Delaware Valley Journal provides unbiased, local reporting for the Philadelphia suburbs of Bucks, Chester, Delaware and Montgomery Counties.
Credit card benefits are under threat due to the possible resurrection of the Credit Card Competition Act of 2022.

“It is inconceivable that in 2023, women in Pennsylvania still earn less than their male colleagues for the same work.”
The forum was so controversial that event planners originally did not reveal its location to attendees until just 48 hours before.
The crime is a misdemeanor, but is reportedly being bumped up to a felony by alleging the payoff was actually a campaign donation.
Former U.S. Senator Pat Toomey explains why Silicon Valley Bank was a bailout, and the right way to prevent similar collapses in the future.
The study finds as many as 2 million private-sector workers in the commonwealth don’t have access to a workplace retirement plan.
Gov. Shapiro has proposed raiding our hard-earned state reserve accounts, built up over the years, despite trying economic circumstances.
Pennsylvania residents pay 29.3 percent more in state and local taxes than the average American household, or about $8,820.
Time may be TikToking away for TikTok and the Americans who use it.
Like woke, being MAGA is also hard to define.
Buckle up, team: I’m a White man from the Midwest with a story to tell about wokeness.
Aarati Martino is already under attack, with people saying her husband is buying her a seat on the school board.
The motion was not without at least one critic.
Doylestown's Paul Martino has opened an upscale Philadelphia sports bar called Bankroll.
Advocates say the merger will add speed to the nation’s supply chain and spur investment.
The move makes Bucks the first county government entity in the nation to file that kind of litigation.
“Right to repair” advocates claim consumers lack repair options.
All the wisdom in the world won’t matter with the wrong candidate.
Philadelphia ranks second, behind only Boston, on its Best Places to Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day list.
Let’s hop into the Wayback Machine and revisit 1952.