America’s future will be decided by what our president can do in the years ahead. And increasingly, he can’t do enough.
America’s future will be decided by what our president can do in the years ahead. And increasingly, he can’t do enough.
While speaking recently at the Brookings Institute, Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey discussed his experiences combatting hyper-partisanship. He feels that executive leadership and a cooperative spirit may be the key to ending the political gridlock at the national level.
California's New "Top-Two" primary system for legislative elections has resulted in politically homogenous runoff elections. However, in most districts the new system has resulted in more choices for voters
As the parties grow more polarized, the divide between them has increased and a large number of registered voters have been subtracted from the parties.
What are some of the forces that are driving members of Congress to the extreme left or right? The nationalization of politics, the strong arm of party leadership, big money and the media
No Labels wants to reduce congressional gridlock by ending single-interest pledges
With last Tuesday’s test of the new open primary system – where all candidates appeared on a single ballot and the top two vote-getters from each district advanced to the general election regardless of party affiliation – California has taken another small step towards more political choice for voters and more accountability and competition for our politicians
For the better part of three decades, there has been no more prominent family in Republican politics than the Bushes. But tough talk about the state of the party on Monday by former Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida — who went so far as to say that Ronald Reagan and his father would have a “hard time” fitting in during this Tea Party era — exhibited a growing distance between the family, which until not very long ago embodied mainstream Republicanism, and the no-compromise conservative activists now driving the party.
Independent candidate Bill Bloomfield beat out a slate of seven candidates in Tuesday’s open primary, earning the chance to challenge Democrat Henry Waxman, a 37-year veteran in Congress, to represent the newly drawn 33rd Congressional District.
Alarcón and Bocanegra are both Democrats and the new state law allows the top two vote getters to advance to the November general election - regardless of party affiliation.