Politics

  • Alabama County May Change Voting Rights

    (The Root) — Drive beyond the tall iron gates of Highland Lakes in Shelby County, Ala., where homes range from $350,000 to a couple of million, and you’ll see that change has come to the South. Children of different races play together outside, while adults tend the yard or jog along the roads and trails.…

  • Obama and His Girls: 13 Favorite Father Photos

    To mark Father’s Day, the White House has compiled a gallery of photos featuring President Obama with his daughters, Sasha and Malia, over the years, and outlined how his commitment to fatherhood has played into presidential policy. This commitment to his family has also translated into the President’s policy agenda. For the past four years, President…

  • Voting Rights' Future: A 'Shelby' Refresher

    (The Root) — It won’t be long before the Supreme Court announces its decision in Shelby County v. Holder, in a major ruling that will determine whether Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act is struck down. The court heard arguments in the case back in February. So why is Section 5 important, again? Quick refresher:…

  • Obama Fooled the Hip-Hop Community

    Erik Nielson, writing at the Huffington Post, says that President Obama deceived many who supported him during his first presidential campaign, including hip-hop artists. He says that Obama’s policies haven’t helped the minorities who elected him to office. There was something remarkable about seeing rappers pledge their support to a mainstream presidential candidate, especially given…

  • How the 'Loving' Case Changed the US

    (The Root) — Forty-six years ago, on June 12, 1967, the Supreme Court ruled that a Virginia law prohibiting Mildred Jeter Loving, who was black, and Richard Loving, who was white, from marrying because of their race was unconstitutional. Their family name, “Loving,” was so perfect for a case about love that it probably would…

  • 'Fisher v. University of Texas': A Refresher

    (The Root) — Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin, the case surrounding a white plaintiff’s challenge to the constitutionality of the diversity-based admissions policies of the University of Texas, is back in the news, with the Supreme Court decision coming any day. But it’s been a while since it was argued way back in…

  • Who Will Be on Zimmerman's Jury?

    (The Root) — At long last, the second-degree-murder trial of George Zimmerman, who fatally shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin last year, began on Monday with jury selection.  Legal experts had predicted that attorneys for the prosecution and defense would probe potential jurors for their attitudes about African Americans (Trayvon), Hispanics (Zimmerman) and guns, as well as…

  • Medgar Evers: Legacy Challenged

    (The Root) — Wednesday will mark the 50th anniversary of the assassination of civil rights leader Medgar Evers, and the timing couldn’t be more significant: Any day now, the Supreme Court could strike down a pair of landmark remedies owed in part to Evers’ activism. Uncertainty hovers over observances that began at Evers’ grave site…

  • 'George W. Obama'? Not Quite

    (The Root) — Ever since the Guardian’s revelation Wednesday that the National Security Agency is gathering millions of Americans’ phone records, and Thursday’s Washington Post report that the NSA tapped into the servers of nine Internet service providers to pry into Americans’ emails and instant messaging traffic, we’ve seen outrage across the political spectrum —…

  • Mitt Romney Flops Again With Hispanic Voters

    Writer Esther J. Cepeda is a bit peeved — to say the least — about recent comments former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney made about the way the Republican Party should go about courting Hispanic voters. In a Washington Post op-ed she writes the following: Romney told the [Wall Street] Journal that in addition to…