Democratic politicians are lining up behind the octogenarian President.
Looking at past Senate elections and some more thoughts on historical patterns.
A generic attack ad that’s cringeworthy in the specific.
Fifty-plus “local” news outlets are a front for David Brock and company.
“Moderate” is up, “Liberal” is down, and “Conservative” is static. What does it mean?
A bill that was never about the thing it’s called doesn’t do that thing.
They’re going to wait until after the midterms to decide whether Iowa and New Hampshire stay at the front of the line.
Joe Manchin has come around on a pared back BBB, surprising just about everyone.
A theory floated in Bush v Gore could radically change American elections.
Japan’s longest-serving prime minister was killed at a campaign rally. He was 67.
Assuming they had the votes, should Democrats carve out yet another exception?
Tweaking the message and getting out the vote don’t matter as much as strategists think.
The new honcho at the original 24 hour news network wants to be more subtle and less alarmest.
The Democrats have lots of problems. Salesmanship is pretty far down the list.
They’re taking their eye off the ball.
Seeing no way to win under their own label, they’ve called a Hail Mary.
Our representation problems are far, far more about structure than they are about the messaging of the parties.
Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans truly represent most Americans. Fixing that is exceedingly unlikely.
A bloc of moderates is not coming to a Senate near you.
The safety gap between affluent, white and poor, minority communities has grown over the last three decades.