Politics

  • NEWS STAND: A Present for Obama, Big Paydays for Freddie and Fannie, Freedom in China, Facebook Dissent in Egypt

    Merry Christmas, Mr. President President Barack Obama’s Christmas present was the health care reform bill the U.S. Senate passed strictly along party lines in the early hours of Christmas Eve. The 60-40 vote along party lines, including the Senate’s two independents, signaled how dead the concept of bipartisanship has become. The great task now is…

  • T’was the Night Before Health Care…

    The imminent passage of health care in the Senate comes at the same time that black Americans in Congress and elsewhere have expressed disappointment that President Obama has not been addressing the needs of communities of color. Black neighborhoods have been hit particularly hard by the foreclosure crisis and the ongoing job and credit crunch.…

  • When the Videotape Lies

    Where I grew up in the East New York section of Brooklyn, one of the most violent neighborhoods in New York, there was an alley alongside the building where my family lived. The alley was a semi-public place: I played in that alley; guys and girls snuck moments to feel each other up in that…

  • NEWS STAND: France's New Black Star, U.S. Justice Toughens Stand on Hate Crimes …

    A Black Politician Rises In France The most popular politician in French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government is Rama Yade, the minister of sports, according to the latest survey. She is also the most visible black politician in a country where few minorities play prominent roles outside of sports and entertainment. Yade, 32, a native of…

  • Letter From Jo’burg

    No sooner had I left my U.S. home and all its fractious politics that I ran into the same scenario thousands of miles away in my other home, South Africa. I came back to brutal opposition politics and a bubbling cauldron of dissent within the ruling party not unlike America’s Blue Dog Democrats. In South Africa, the ruling…

  • 10 Lessons From Copenhagen

    COPENHAGEN—For the past 12 days, the NAACP’s Climate Justice Initiative has been blogging from the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark. While the discourse on global climate change often focuses on the impacts on wildlife or faraway places, it also has a direct and profound impact on communities at home in the United…

  • NEWS STAND: Health Care Advances, Death Sentences Drop, Minority Farmers Sue, French Debate Identity

    News Stand Closer to Universal Health Care President Obama’s health care bill moved a step closer to passage when Democrats in the U.S. Senate voted to cut off a Republican filibuster. With members voting strictly along party lines, the 60-40 vote indicated that the Democrats had rounded up the votes they need despite vehement opposition…

  • Winners and Losers in Copenhagen

    Who won in Copenhagen? Americans like to keep score and the question is inevitable as the world digests the inconclusive and disappointing outcome of the UN’s climate change summit. The answer depends on what you read. The Washington Post says China is the big winner. The newspaper’s analysis argues that one outcome of the summit…

  • NEWS STAND: Tiger Woods Wins and Loses, Racism in China, Quads Admitted to Yale, Grading Obama

    Tiger Woods Wins PGA Player Award, Loses Tag Heuer Watch Deal The relentless wave of bad news about Tiger Woods took a brief respite Friday when his fellow professional golfers voted him the player of the year.  This was the 10th time in 13 years as a professional that Woods has won the award, a…

  • The Prez in Denmark

    When President Barack Obama touches down in Copenhagen, Denmark, tomorrow, he will be entering a hornet’s nest of urgent, competing priorities that will test his negotiating skills like never before. Far from the kumbaya conference that one might expect for a gathering devoted to saving the planet, the two weeks of United Nations-sponsored climate talks…