The Tyranny of the Tantrum
What we're seeing from the health care town halls and what we've seen from the "birthers" is essentially what I call the Tyranny of the Tantrum, which many parents encounter during the "terrible twos."
What we're seeing from the health care town halls and what we've seen from the "birthers" is essentially what I call the Tyranny of the Tantrum, which many parents encounter during the "terrible twos."
John Ridley | Posted 09.08.2009 | Politics
MartÃnez's move can been seen as another accomplished person of color flipping a metaphorical middle finger at all the Republicans have devolved into: The party of the "angry white voter."
HuffingtonPost.com | Thomas B. Edsall | Posted 09.03.2009 | Politics
With Republican party leaders so constrained by ideological blinders that none of their positions is likely to produce gains among non-white minoritie...
Paul Jenkins | Posted 03.24.2009 | Politics
The complicated picture of how America came to vote for its first black president reflects the country's multifarious attitude towards race
Paul Jenkins | Posted 01.28.2009 | Politics
Like a restricted country club that would rather die than change, the Republican Party is marginalizing itself for the sake of the white men who run it.
Gautam Dutta | Posted 12.07.2008 | Politics
Marriage should be sacred, not a political prop. We need to put another initiative on the ballot -- this time to undo Prop 8.
Jon Wiener | Posted 12.05.2008 | Home
When Reagan won reelection in 1984, the electorate was 86 per cent white; by 2004, the white percentage had dropped to 77. That's one reason why an interracial coalition is likely to elect America's first black president today.
Nick Penniman | Posted 11.30.2008 | Politics
McCain is inarticulate about the economy, and the Republican brand is more tarnished than it has been in decades.
New York Times | Frank Rich | Posted 11.26.2008 | Politics
IT seems like a century ago now, but it was only in 2005 that a National Journal poll of Beltway insiders predicted that George Allen, then a popular ...
Earl Ofari Hutchinson | Posted 11.16.2008 | Politics
Obama is a moderate centrist Democrat who has gotten to the threshold of snatching the White House by being everything that Jackson isn't.
Huffington Post | Rachel Sklar | Posted 11.06.2008 | Media
Brook Lundy is the co-founder and president of someecards.com, the wildly successful and acerbically hilarious online greeting card service.
Diane Tucker | Posted 01.24.2009 | Home
During the primaries Obama got trounced in southwestern Virginia. "Presence really matters," Gov. Kaine told Obama. "Go and show 'em you're really interested."
Karen Russell | Posted 10.22.2008 | Politics
The democrats need to stop whining about Senator Obama, get off our butts and help him win. Enough with the all the hand wringing, with all the "what ...
Rob Kall | Posted 09.29.2008 | Politics
Zinn: I think he has to talk more about class issues -- more about how this government and McCain as part of it, and has been funneling all the wealth of this country into the rich.
Brad Listi | Posted 09.25.2008 | Home
It's depressing to think that so many American adults need to be spoon-fed like this in order to feel comfortable with a brown family in the White House. As far we've come, Monday night's message was that we have a long way to go.
Tom Douglas | Posted 09.25.2008 | Home
Tim Kaine seemed like a no-brainer, but Obama is the Jordan on this team. He needs role players. It remains to be seen whether Biden is more like a Luc Longley or a Steve Kerr.
Michelle Haimoff | Posted 09.20.2008 | Politics
Here's the thing - people are going to vote against Obama because he's black. This is the country we live in. And I know, he's only half black, yadda...
Paul Jenkins | Posted 08.12.2008 | Politics
It is McCain who needs to score exceptionally well among white voters, better in fact than any other Republican presidential candidate in the past 20 years, including George H. W. Bush.
David Moore | Posted 07.29.2008 | Politics
What is truly amazing at this point in U.S. history is that white voters now view a black candidate about as positively as a white candidate on most issues, and in some cases much more positively.
John Zogby | Posted 07.10.2008 | Politics
Can Obama win the white working-class voters in battleground states? Well, he didn't this spring, so that's our first clue. Another is the fact that neither Al Gore nor John Kerry won their support.
Earl Ofari Hutchinson | Posted 07.08.2008 | Politics
Nader asked rhetorically "Is it because he wants to talk white" as to why Obama supposedly doesn't take hard stances on issues, but he didn't say how he thinks he should talk to avoid sounding white.
Kelly Nuxoll | Posted 07.07.2008 | Home
The population of the U.S. and the world is changing. White people are old. Young people who turn on the TV and see a President Obama will be seeing someone who looks like them or their relatives.
Jackie Hammond | Posted 06.07.2008 | Home
Now-obscure and critically dismissed author W.J. Cash provides important keys to understanding Obama's troubles connecting with white working voters in the South and Appalachia and elsewhere.
Jackie Hammond | Posted 06.04.2008 | Home
"If this cultural group could get around the table with Black America, you would see populist American politics change forever. These two groups want the very same things from government."
M.S. Bellows, Jr. | Posted 05.22.2008 | Home
Clinton doesn't help Obama with his electoral map in November. He needs someone who has both pull in the states he wants to win and who can help repair rifts with rural white voters. Two names immediately come to mind.
Terrance Heath | Posted 09.25.2009 | Politics