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Feb 02 2016
News
OPINION: Trump fever has broken. Cruz out-organized him. Here's what's next
The nation’s two major political parties entrust Iowa with beginning the elimination process – that one Midwestern state representing just 1 percent of the nation’s population, with an electorate not reflective of America writ large (Iowa’s population is whiter, more Protestant and decidedly less black and Hispanic than the rest of the country).
Guest Writer - RightMay 03 2021
Opinion
When Wokeness Becomes Weakness
Recently, James Carville, the unfrozen Clintonite of Democratic politics, stirred a predictable controversy by complaining about “wokeness” in an interview with Sean Illing of Vox. Everyone has a different definition of the term, but Carville’s was one you hear a lot from strategically minded Democrats: Wokeness is “faculty lounge” rhetoric, the language of elite hyper-educated progressivism,
Ross DouthatAug 19 2019
News
For Trump, appeals to white fears about race may be a tougher sell in 2020: Reuters/Ipsos poll
President Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric and focus on the grievances of white voters helped him win the 2016 election. But a Reuters analysis of public opinion over the last four years suggests that Trump’s brand of white identity politics may be less effective in the 2020 election campaign.
The analysis comes amid widespread criticism of Trump’s racially charged comments about
ReutersSep 02 2016
News
How Trump got from Point A to Point A on immigration
The morning after Donald Trump once again embraced his hard-line immigration posture in a shouted speech, at least four members of his two-week-old Hispanic advisory council said they might not vote for the Republican presidential nominee and warned that his harsh rhetoric would cost him the election.
Washington PostFeb 08 2021
News
How can racial equity in coronavirus vaccinations be achieved?
People of color have experienced a disproportionate amount of suffering during the coronavirus pandemic in the United States. Black, Hispanic and Indigenous Americans make up an outsized share of COVID-19 cases and face substantially greater risk of hospitalization and death than white people when they do become infected.
But several weeks into the rollout of life-saving vaccines, white
Yahoo! The 360Jun 13 2021
Analysis
Fewer Than 2% Of Movie Characters Are Muslim, Report Finds
Fewer than 2% of movie characters with speaking roles are Muslim, according to a study released on Thursday.
The study, which examined 200 popular films from the U.S., U.K., Australia, and New Zealand released from 2017 to 2019, found only a handful of Muslim characters ― and those were most often in limited or stereotypical roles. The report, “Missing & Maligned: The Reality of
HuffPostNov 15 2012
News
Romney says Obama won election with promise of 'gifts' for key groups, Jindal disagrees
Mitt Romney, in some of his first reported remarks since his concession speech, claimed Wednesday he lost the presidential election because President Obama provided "gifts" to key groups like black, Hispanic and young voters.
Fox News DigitalNov 05 2016
News
Early Voting Data Shows Who’s Turning Out
Early- and absentee-voting data suggests Hillary Clinton may be benefiting from an uptick in Hispanic voters even as turnout among African-Americans appears to be lagging compared with 2008 and 2012. Donald Trump, meanwhile, isn’t seeing a significant turnout boost powered by white voters, though Republicans are seeing positive signs in several Midwestern states.
Wall Street Journal (News)Feb 18 2016
News
Clinton’s Lead Has Evaporated in Nevada and Her Supporters Are Panicking
For months, pundits have marked Nevada in the “win” column for Hillary Clinton, who was thought to hold an unassailable lead with the state’s large Hispanic population. But according to a new poll, Clinton might not win Nevada in the landslide that everyone predicted. In fact, she might not win it at all.
Somehow, while everyon
Vanity FairFeb 02 2018
News
Restrictionists Are Misleading You About Immigrant Crime Rates
President Donald Trump never misses an opportunity to depict unauthorized immigrants—especially of the Hispanic variety—as "rapists and criminals." He did it again in his State of the Union address when he drew attention to two Long Island teenage girls killed by the El Salvadorian gang MS13. Those deaths are tragic, but they don't say much one way or the other about the propensity of these
Reason