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Nov 24 2019
Opinion
America's Democracy Is at Stake. Why Aren't We Acting?
The United States is under attack. Every intelligence and national security agency and official agrees that foreign adversaries such as China, Iran, North Korea, and Russia continue to try and infiltrate our electoral processes.
Foreign actors have hacked our election systems, disseminated propaganda online to influence voters, funneled money into our elections through opaque groups
RealClearPoliticsMar 12 2018
News
Everything we think about the political correctness debate is wrong
Support for free speech is rising, and is higher among liberals and college graduates.
VoxNov 20 2019
Opinion
Stacey Abrams: Republicans’ extreme positions open the door for Democrats in Georgia
During the 2018 gubernatorial campaign, Vice President Pence came to Georgia. He campaigned for my opponent and, in an effort to dismiss me and the legitimacy of my supporters, told his audience, “This ain’t Hollywood. This is Georgia.”
Perhaps the vice president was not familiar with Georgia’s vibrant film industry, or perhaps he assumed workers in that booming sector here do not
Stacey AbramsJun 30 2020
Analysis
Don’t Cheer Woodrow Wilson’s Cancellation
First things first: Woodrow Wilson was a deplorable bigot and one of the worst presidents in American history. He re-segregated the federal government, glamorized the Ku Klux Klan, screened The Birth of a Nation at the White House, and opposed Reconstruction and black suffrage (Dylan Matthews has more on Wilson’s racism). In common with many progressive intellectuals of his time, he was a
The American ConservativeMar 25 2021
Opinion
Calling the Atlanta Shootings a Hate Crime Isn’t Nearly Enough
In 2002, the brutal beating of a junior by his classmate at Morehouse College, in Atlanta, made national headlines. The case marked Georgia’s prosecutorial debut of its hate-crime statute, on the grounds that the perpetrator, 19-year-old Aaron Price, had accused 20-year-old Gregory Love of making a sexual advance toward him in a shower stall, and spouted homophobic rants as he retrieved the
The AtlanticFeb 16 2020
News
Democratic hopefuls now test strength among minority voters
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — For I.S. Leevy Johnson, the Democrats’ search for a challenger to take on President Donald Trump is personal.
“There is what I call an ‘ABT mood’ in the black community: Anybody but Trump,” said the 77-year-old who was the first black graduate of the University of South Carolina’s law school. “It has people of color very motivated and excited about voting this time
Associated PressOct 13 2013
News
G.O.P.’s Hopes to Take Senate Are Dimming
Next year was supposed to be a prime opportunity for Republicans to retake the Senate. And for a while, everything seemed to be breaking their way: a wave of Democratic retirements, a fluke in the electoral map that put a large number of races in states that President Obama lost, a strong farm team of conservative Senate hopefuls from the House.
New York Times (News)Sep 19 2012
News
8 takeaways from the NBC-Wall Street Journal poll
The NBC-Wall Street Journals latest national poll was released late Tuesday, and we spent our night  dork alert!  poring over the results for clues as to how the electorate is thinking about the county and the two men running for president.
Washington PostJan 24 2016
News
As Washington publically frets over storm, GOP worries about impact of Trump, Cruz on Hill majority
Essentially everyone in Washington is freaking out about the blizzard.
But for several weeks now, many congressional Republicans have privately freaked out about the prospects of Donald Trump or, to a lesser degree, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, emerging as the party’s standard-bearer in the presidential sweepstakes.
The theory is that both candidates are so polarizing that their
Fox News DigitalJan 24 2022
Perspectives Blog
When Bipartisanship is A Long Way Away
From the CenterAs Joe Biden begins his second year in office, it’s worth remembering his campaign pledge to rebuild a spirit of bipartisanship in our national politics. Fifty-three weeks after he was sworn into office, even the president’s biggest fans would admit that is not even close to happening.
Biden’s recent voting rights speech in Georgia seemed to mark a turning point in his
Dan Schnur