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The great Democratic divide elects Trump twice

The 2016 survey found that Elites were 74 percent liberal and 1 percent conservative, while Working Class voters were 43 percent moderate and 24 percent conservative.

America may have a new third party: the Democrats

This advantage occurred despite Republicans slipping by 1 percentage point, going from 36 percent in 2020 to 35 percent in 2024, according to the unfinalized exit polls.

This is the Obama-Biden-Harris economic legacy

People who had a negative view of the economy voted for Trump by a 2-1 margin (62 percent to 31 percent). This was a key reason why Hillary Clinton lost in 2016.

A civil debate? Now that’s an October surprise

In the most recent Winning the Issues survey looking at the presidential ballot, 1 percent of Democrats were undecided, 2 percent of Republicans, and not surprisingly, 19 percent of independents. 

To debate or not to debate, that is the question

In a new Winning the Issues survey (September 18–19), the electorate was asked how each candidate did in the debate on a scale of 1 (very poorly) to 5 (neutral) to 9 (very well).

Tuberville blocks an Army nominee over Austin hospitalization

He was readmitted to the hospital on Jan. 1 for complications stemming from the earlier procedure.During his January hospital stay, Austin spent time in the intensive care unit, and some of his duties

The economic case Trump needs to make 

The truth is Biden will become the first president to have had deficits of over $1 trillion dollars in every one of his four years in office.

The never-ending fight for civil rights

Organizations such as the Fearless Fund, set up to close the gap that has Black female entrepreneurs awarded less than 1 percent of venture capital funds, are told by courts to stop awarding their relatively

The debate: Preseason is over

In Michigan and Wisconsin, neither candidate has been able to break out, with the current margins being below 1 percent.

Ten rules for understanding the 2024 elections

With summer approaching and the first debate ever between an incumbent president and a convicted felon looming, this seems like the ideal moment to propose 10 rules for following the campaigns.  1) Remember