Politics

  • Cory Booker's Fight to End Homophobia

    (The Root) — Making good on a promise, Sen.-elect Cory Booker began officiating the marriages of same-sex couples in New Jersey just after midnight this morning — as they first became legally possible, thanks to a court ruling. Later this morning, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie announced that although he continues to oppose same-sex marriage,…

  • Obama Addresses Problems With Health Care Website

    (The Root) — President Barack Obama addressed the continuing problems with HealthCare.gov, the online health insurance marketplace, on Monday, saying that the website is “too slow” and acknowledging his own frustrations with the issues.  “The problem has been that the website that’s supposed to make it easy to apply for and purchase the insurance is…

  • Obama, Cruz and Christie Walk Into a Bar

    (The Root) — After all that, there were really no winners in the shutdown fight because there was no appreciable policy outcome. And come early February 2014, we’ll repeat it all over again since Republicans who didn’t get anything are going to want their pound of flesh in the next quarter. But looking over the…

  • Jeh Johnson to Be Named Homeland Security Secretary

    (The Root) — Jeh Johnson is slated to become the next secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, Reuters reports. President Barack Obama is expected to nominate Johnson, who served as the general counsel of the Department of Defense from 2009 to 2012, to replace Janet Napolitano, who resigned earlier this year. “He is one…

  • How the GOP Lost the Shutdown Fight

    (The Root) — By the time Americans finish eating Christmas turkey, recover from New Year’s Eve hangovers and start looking ahead to Super Bowl Sunday and President Barack Obama’s sixth State of the Union address, the government shutdown of 2013 will already seem like ancient history. Poll numbers will shift, issues will change and members…

  • Sen. Cory Booker's Rich Friends Will Win

    (The Root) — Cory Booker’s inevitable election to the U.S. Senate on Wednesday will prove, for large segments of the black community, both historic and bittersweet. Booker’s meteoric rise since being elected mayor of Newark, N.J., in 2006 has been assisted by a well-crafted media persona. Booker first burst onto Newark’s political scene in 2002,…

  • Assess the Crowd, Not Just the Lone Radical

    Ta-Nehisi Coates, in a piece at The Atlantic about a recent protest by conservatives in Washington, D.C., explains how he is less interested in the actions of a single radical person and more concerned with how the surrounding crowd, or audience, accepts or rejects the individual’s claims.   It is the wisdom of the crowd…

  • The Truth About Being the Other Woman

    (The Root) — Last week, former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick was sentenced to 28 years in prison for corruption. Even though Kilpatrick’s name has become synonymous with corrupt politics, most people outside of Detroit don’t know the details of the case that landed Kilpatrick a conviction in March for racketeering conspiracy, fraud, extortion and tax…

  • Confederate Flag Waved at Memorial Protest

    A rally on Sunday in Washington, D.C., went from civil to mean-spirited as it made its way from the World War II Memorial to the White House. Hundreds gathered from across the country to protest the closure of the memorial, one of the many national landmarks closed because of the partial government shutdown. Though it…

  • GOP's Midterm-Election Nightmare Scenario

    (The Root) — The conventional wisdom among the Washington, D.C., chattering class had been that the GOP — despite its dangerous display of extremism — was at little risk of losing a majority in the House of Representatives at the 2014 midterm elections. But a host of surveys and polling data suggests that the government…