Politics

  • Where Voting Rights Are Under Attack

    (The Root) — When President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act into law in August 1965, he described the law as a “triumph for freedom as huge as any victory that has ever been won on any battlefield.” The announcement came with plans to analyze voter-registration rolls, identify communities with the largest numbers…

  • Tea Party: Dropping GOP Stars?

    Members of the Tea Party plan to abandon Republican lawmakers they helped elect four years ago because many have adopted more moderate positions on key issues such as immigration and health care, the Associated Press reports. The move could hurt the re-election chances of former stars, including the governors of Florida and Ohio. Four years…

  • Obama and Holder: Feds Will Fight to Protect Voting Rights

    During a meeting on Monday with civil rights leaders, President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder said that the Justice Department has an open-door policy regarding reports of voting-rights violations. The meeting was an apparent attempt to assuage any concerns that civil rights groups might have had after last month’s Supreme Court voting-rights ruling in Shelby…

  • Obama's 'Grand Bargain' for Jobs

    Is there hope that President Obama might break the political gridlock on budget negotiations? According to a new proposal he’s extending to Republicans, he thinks so. The offer that’s been labeled a “grand bargain” would involve cutting corporate tax rates in exchange for job investments, the Huffington Post reports: White House officials say just because…

  • How North Carolina Became Red Again

    (The Root) — One might shrug off the sweeping voting restrictions (pdf) approved last week in North Carolina as typical of a Southern state under Republican control. But look again: Unlike many of its neighbors, the Tar Heel State had been well down the path of progressivism for several years before the GOP shut it…

  • Kanye West Starts Music Program in Chicago

    Kanye West is arguably the biggest music star to have ever come out of Chicago, but sometimes people forget about his roots in the Second City. West himself has made it no easier for fans to remember, rapping almost exclusively about trips to Paris and other worldwide travels, but recently he made a grand gesture…

  • GOP Party of Obstruction: The New Normal?

    The unproductive standoff between President Barack Obama and the GOP House continues to loom as the Democratic Party appears likely to grow nationally and the Republican Party remains firmly entrenched in Washington, Eugene Robinson writes at the Washington Post. The bad news is that approval ratings for both the president and Congress are sinking, with…

  • Voting Rights: Feds Set to Mess With Texas

    (The Root) — When Texas’ Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott gloated on Twitter just hours after the Supreme Court hobbled the Voting Rights Act (pdf) — that “Eric Holder can no longer deny Voter ID in Texas” — he had to know that the Obama administration would respond. Attorney General Holder delivered the counterpunch on…

  • President Obama: What Drives His Black Critics?

    When President Barack Obama failed to kiss the rings of scholar Cornel West and talk-show host Tavis Smiley in 2008 before entering the White House, he unwittingly touched off a series of invectives from the duo, L.Z. Granderson writes at CNN. … When Obama didn’t accept the invitation to speak at [Tavis] Smiley’s forum in…

  • Weiner Scandal: Black Mayor for NYC?

    (The Root) — When former congressman-turned-mayoral front-runner Anthony Weiner acknowledged during a press conference on Tuesday that his sexting scandal had lasted longer than voters had previously been led to believe, one thing was clear: His campaign for mayor was officially in trouble. What was less clear is exactly who would benefit from his campaign’s…