July 8, 2015: Terrence Jeffrey: CNS News: Top 5 Districts for Criminal Cases in U.S. District Court Are on Mexican Border
Dec 18, 2014: New American: Government Statistics: 65 Percent of Children Receive Federal Aid
Terence Jeffrey, who commented on the report for CNSNews.com, observed: “How to be dependent on government is now one of the earliest life lessons America is teaching nearly a supermajority of children.”
Terence Jeffrey, who commented on the report for CNSNews.com, observed: “How to be dependent on government is now one of the earliest life lessons America is teaching nearly a supermajority of children.”

OP/Ed BYTE: Feb 12, 2014: Terence Jeffrey (Washington Examiner) asks "How much power will Congress let Obama seize?" "This week, Obama swept aside the plain and unambiguous language in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act that he personally signed and fought all the way to the Supreme Court to maintain so he could unilaterally suspend the law's requirement that the government extract penalty "payments" from businesses that do not comply with a mandate to provide their workers with health insurance. It does not appear Congress is going to do anything about this remarkable usurpation of power. So, if the president can unilaterally cut the payments some businesses are required by law to make to the government, why can't he unilaterally increase the payments extracted from some families?"
Terence P. Jeffrey is editor-in-chief of the conservative US Internet news service CNSNews.com, a position he assumed in September 2007. He became Editor of Human Events, a national conservative weekly in the United States, in 1996. Prior to that, he served as campaign manager to Republican candidate Pat Buchanan in the 1996 presidential race, and as research director in Buchanan's 1992 campaign. In between the two campaigns, Jeffrey was executive director of The American Cause. He was born in San Francisco and graduated from Princeton University in 1981. He worked from 1987-91 as an editorial writer at the Washington Times, which nominated him for the Pulitzer Prize.