Politics

  • Young Voters of Color Battle 'Time Tax'

    According to a new report, young voters, particularly those of color, are inconvenienced at voting polls. The report, led by Advancement Project, a multiracial civil rights organization, and OurTime.org, a nonprofit that seeks to bring out the political voice of young Americans, concluded that voting polices that have been enacted and/or proposed in certain states,…

  • Republicans Block Yet Another Key Obama Appeals Court Nominee

    Senate Republicans are at it again, blocking yet another Obama nomination to the key U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Monday. Robert L. Wilkins is the third straight nominee to the influential court to be blocked by Republicans, the Associated Press reports. According to the AP, Wilkins is a district…

  • Outgunned: Stigma Over Mental Illness Linked to Gun Violence

    Editor’s note: Read part 1 and part 2 of the series. Just days after Aaron Alexis killed 12 people and injured three others in the Washington Navy Yard shooting, it was revealed that he had suffered from severe delusions in the months leading up to the tragedy. Ultimately, his paranoia would get the best of…

  • Obama Health Care Problems Affect More Than Just Policy

    President Barack Obama has long maintained a decent public-approval rating despite his political problems. But with the disastrous health care rollout, his track record for bouncing back may be threatened, the Associated Press reports. According to the AP, the president, because of his credibility, was able to bounce back even during nasty policy debates and…

  • Politicians Mess Up, but They Keep Their Jobs

    What do Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul and Toronto Mayor Rob Ford have in common? Each politician, along with other political brothers-in-arms, faces a serious credibility crisis. Charges of plagiarism have Paul looking like a Bluegrass State punk, just when he was coasting along toward his 2016 presidential ambitions. And what about Ford? It’s a great…

  • How Black Was JFK's Camelot?

    Editor’s note: For those who are wondering about the retro title of this black-history series, please take a moment to learn about historian Joel A. Rogers, author of the 1934 book 100 Amazing Facts About the Negro With Complete Proof, to whom these “amazing facts” are an homage. Amazing Fact About the Negro No. 55:…

  • Medicaid: Obamacare’s Untold Success Story

    The untold success story in the Obamacare rollout is that the working poor are enrolling in Medicaid. Sadly, the media have largely chosen to ignore this fact. Positive statistics are crowded out by incessant Republican distracters who prefer obsessing over glitches on the Healthcare.gov website than highlighting the thousands of families already benefiting from the…

  • Landmark Affirmative Action Case in Court Again

    The buildup was big: First the Supreme Court eviscerated a portion of the Voting Rights Act. Then it declared that a federal ban on gay marriage was unconstitutional. But when the justices ruled back in June on a case challenging an affirmative action program at the University of Texas at Austin, they sent the case,…

  • Obama: Canceled Health Plans to Be Restored for 1 Year

    In an attempt to make good on his frequently repeated health care promise that Americans could keep their existing health care plan if they wanted to, President Obama announced on Thursday that he would allow changes to his health care law. The changes would allow insurance companies the option to continue offering consumers plans that…

  • House Republicans Attempting to Impeach Eric Holder

    GOP House members are slated to put forth articles of impeachment against U.S. Attorney General Eric holder on Thursday, hoping to remove the head of the Department of Justice under grounds that he has lied to Congress and failed to uphold federal law, Reuters reports. Texas Rep. Pete Olson was responsible for writing the articles…