Rob Okun: Cracking open gender’s role in electing U.S. presidents
Vice President Kamala Harris’s dramatic entry into the presidential race in July put a new twist on the already gendered nature of the election.
Vice President Kamala Harris’s dramatic entry into the presidential race in July put a new twist on the already gendered nature of the election.
The idea that it’s a bad thing for Liz Cheney to be on board with the Kamala Harris campaign reminds me why it’s hard for me to want to admit out loud that I’m a progressive Democrat.
By and large, Tuesday’s CBS News debate between the two VP candidates, U.S. Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, was collegial, friendly, nothing near cringeworthy.
Messages flooded social media on Tuesday congratulating Jimmy Carter, the first former United States president to reach age 100.
LGBTQ+ community members and allies are invited to a celebration of the 10th anniversary of gay marriage on Sunday in Charlottesville.
With all the heartfelt expressions of love and devotion you have long professed for our country, doing nothing now is tantamount to arranging deck chairs on the Titanic after it struck the iceberg.
Remember how, just yesterday, House Republicans were threatening to investigate Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky for election interference because he visited a Pennsylvania weapons factory?
Congress, perpetually unable to do its job, is at least good at kicking the can down the road, as evidenced by the latest continuing resolution that passed both houses on Wednesday.
Donald Trump keeps sending out mixed messages on early and mail-in voting, portending a repeat of the 2020 cycle, in which Democrats got out the vote early, the key to a 7 million vote landslide for Joe Biden.
Before the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, was enacted in 2010, 50 million Americans didn’t have health insurance.