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Consumer Financial Protection: Dead on Arrival
Doing what they do best these days, on Thursday Senate Republicans obstructed another measure — this time blocking a vote on the nomination of Richard Cordray for director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Seven votes shy of the 60 needed to bring Cordray’s nomination to the floor for an up-or-down vote, the bureau (which…
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The War on Black Voters
A curious phenomenon occurred in 2011. As if in concert, 40 Republican-controlled state legislatures introduced changes to their voting procedures. The laws read as minor tweaks and adjustments, and they vary from state to state, but they all have the outcome of making it harder to vote. Incidentally, the efforts have been strongest in battleground…
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Does the Payroll-Tax Cut Stand a Chance?
In a strikingly populist speech in Kansas on Tuesday, President Obama posited that the United States has a choice: to be a country in which a few do well while everyone else struggles to get by, or one where “we still have a stake in each other’s success.” Among several other policy pitches involving the…
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Obama Occupies Wall Street?
On Tuesday President Obama delivered an economic speech on what he called a “make-or-break moment” for the middle class and poor. “This is the defining issue of our time,” the president said from a Kansas high school on the questions of how to restore the nation’s economy, rebuild the shrinking middle class and narrow the…
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Where Will Herman Cain's Supporters Go?
Back in March, before Herman Cain officially announced his candidacy for president and political watchers were just beginning to ask, “Who is Herman Cain?” he granted an interview with The Root. Though largely unknown at the time, the former Godfather’s Pizza executive was confident about his chances, partially because of his popularity with certain factions…
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Should Public Schools Consider Pupils' Race?
On Friday the departments of Education and Justice jointly released new guidance emphasizing that public schools may voluntarily consider race in order to achieve student diversity. The two documents (one for K-12, the other for colleges and universities) describe various approaches that administrators can lawfully take when using race in decisions such as admissions, recruitment…
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See the White House Holiday Makeover
It’s officially the holiday season at the White House, where 85,000 visitors are expected to tour in the month of December alone. Kicking things off on Wednesday, first lady Michelle Obama welcomed military families (and a pack of media folks) for the first viewing of this year’s holiday decorations. “We’re using the holiday season here…
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FCC's Clyburn Pushes Back on Net Neutrality
As one of five commissioners on the Federal Communications Commission — and the first African-American woman to serve, by the way — Mignon Clyburn hasn’t exactly been winning new fans lately. Last week the commission’s Internet regulatory rules went into effect, newly stirring criticism from net-neutrality advocates, who say that the guidelines don’t go far…
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Should Racial Profiling Be Illegal?
Earlier this month, the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security held a hearing — “21st Century Law Enforcement: How Smart Policing Targets Criminal Behavior” — focused on the effectiveness, or lack thereof, of racial profiling. Witness after witness maintained that targeting people based on race is shoddy police work. “The racially discriminatory…
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Defending Obama's Drug Policy
The national “War on Drugs,” which escalated in the 1980s with the creation of mandatory minimum prison sentences, notoriously drove criminal-justice stats off the charts. According to the Sentencing Project, drug offenders in state prisons have increased thirteenfold since 1980, and drug offenders currently account for half of the federal prison population. African Americans are…