Politics

  • Olympic Champion Carl Lewis Claims He Was Bullied by Chris Christie  

    Updated Tues., Jan. 21, 3:35 p.m. EST: New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie says that former Olympian Carl Lewis is just suffering from a bit of “sour grapes” in response to the track star’s accusations that Christie pushed him out of the 2011 state Senate race, NBC News reports.  Courts ultimately upheld the decision made by…

  • First Family Commemorates MLK Day at Soup Kitchen

    President Obama and his family chose a Washington, D.C., soup kitchen to honor Martin Luther King Jr.’s commitment to service on this Day of Service. The president, first lady and daughters Malia and Sasha helped prepare meals at the DC Central Kitchen. Take a look:

  • On MLK Day, Remember: Workers’ Rights Are Civil Rights

    Half a century ago, thousands upon thousands of people from all across this country gathered in Washington, D.C. We all know this story—it was the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. It was there that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. uttered his famous words, “I have a dream.” That speech and that march fundamentally…

  • Wisconsin Lawmakers Target Institutional Racism

    Wisconsin leads the nation in the percentage of incarcerated African Americans, according to a report released this week by the Center on Wisconsin Strategy. While African-American men made up 4.8 percent of the total adult male population in Dane County, whose county seat is Madison, Wis., which is also the state capital, they accounted for more than…

  • Obama Will Keep Spying Because That's What Presidents Do

    Early reviews are in, and the consensus seems pretty clear: President Barack Obama isn’t going to fundamentally alter the NSA’s spying regime. As the National Journal’s James Oliphant wrote following the president’s speech Friday, new reforms “will have little operational effect” on how the National Security Agency operates going forward. And, if you ask me,…

  • Judge Strikes Down Pennsylvania Voter-ID Law

    In a victory for the opponents of Pennsylvania’s voter-ID law, a state judge spiked the requirement that mandated all Pennsylvanians must show photo identification before casting their ballots, the Associated Press reports. Commonwealth Court Judge Bernard L. McGinley, who is a Democrat, said that the law would place an exorbitant burden on the people’s right…

  • Web-Access Ruling Is a Loss for People of Color

    The fight to preserve a free and open Internet has been raging for years, but now it’s crunch time. The big telecom companies have just won a major round in their fight to privatize the Web, and it’s now up to the Federal Communications Commission to reverse the missteps it has made over the past…

  • Post-Shelby Cleanup: Bipartisan Effort Aims to Revive Voting Rights Act

    When the Supreme Court ruled in its June 2013 Shelby v. Holder decision that a key component of the 1965 Voting Rights Act was unconstitutional, the responsibility fell to Congress either to fill the gaping hole left by the striking down of the formula used for Section 5’s preclearance requirement or to otherwise update protections…

  • Obama to Nominate His 1st Black Lesbian Federal Judge

    President Barack Obama is slated to appoint his first-ever African-American openly LGBT federal judge on Thursday, once again showing his commitment to diversifying the judicial system, Politico reports. Staci Michelle Yandle, who is currently practicing privately, is the woman President Obama wants to place in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Illinois,…

  • The Rev. Jeremiah Wright Bashes the President at MLK Birthday Breakfast

    The Rev. Jeremiah Wright left no stone unturned in the bashing of President Obama when speaking at a breakfast co-hosted by the Chicago Teachers Union to commemorate Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday, the Chicago Sun-Times reports. The one-time friend and pastor to the president claimed that Abraham Lincoln, whom Obama greatly admires, loved to tell…