Dixie’s Long Journey From Democratic Stronghold To Republican Redoubt

The tragic events in Charleston this month have released years of racial and political tension in the South, and the pressure is being felt by Republican officeholders across the region. Why the Republicans? Because it is increasingly difficult to find officeholders in the region who are not Republicans. CONT. Ron […] Read more »

Can Hillary Clinton step forward on race without leaving white voters behind?

… Clinton 2008 may have been leery of speaking overtly about gender, race or even the historic nature of her own campaign. But Clinton 2016 plans to put race and other issues of inequality front and center. … So for candidate Clinton circa 2016, the question becomes just how far […] Read more »

Most Americans Believe Protests Make the Country Better

With the Fourth of July fast approaching, the nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute released new data on American perspectives on what makes someone truly American and what makes the U.S. unique in the world. The survey found that a majority (63 percent) of Americans believe that protests challenging unfair treatment […] Read more »

In U.S., Socialist Presidential Candidates Least Appealing

As the 2016 presidential election field takes shape, more than nine in 10 Americans say they would vote for a qualified presidential candidate who is Catholic, a woman, black, Hispanic or Jewish. Less than half of Americans would vote for a candidate who is a socialist. CONT. Justin McCarthy, Gallup Read more »

Republicans Tread Carefully in Criticism of Confederate Flag

The massacre of nine African-Americans in a storied Charleston church last week, which thrust the issues of race relations and gun rights into the center of the 2016 presidential campaign, has now resurfaced another familiar and divisive question in the emerging contest for the Republican nomination: what to do with […] Read more »