Linda Killian says it is time to bring problem solving back to Washington.
Linda Killian says it is time to bring problem solving back to Washington.
In today's Problem-Solver's Daily, Rep. Peter Welch is calling for bipartisan solutions, two Florida Representatives are contributing to hyper-partisanship and what do your move and music preferences say about your politics.
In today's Problem-Solver's Daily, learn about a law President Obama signed and both houses of Congress passed that could reduce gridlock, find out how Americans' beliefs are being sorted and check out some possible solutions for the U.S. postal service.
We elect presidents to change the way our government works, but they have been powerless to reorganize departments for decades. The No Labels solution: Give presidents the same power to reorganize their branch of government given to every president from Franklin Roosevelt to Ronald Reaga
In this election cycle, more and more people are identifying as "independent voters." MSNBC's The Cycle yesterday featured Senior Scholar at the Wilson Center, Linda Killian, who shows that 38% of voters consider themselves independent -- up from 32% in 2008. Among all voters--Republican, Democrat, and Independent--27% have not decided who they will vote for in November
When it works, politics is played between the 40 yard lines -- or that's where most of the action takes place. But when that middle ground is lost and each side is playing inside its own 20, nothing happens.
Grover Norquist, the president of Americans for Tax Reform, has long held sway over members of Congress by holding them to a pledge against tax increases. But a small and increasingly vocal group of freshman lawmakers are pushing back.
While the federal government struggles to agree on anything, there are signs of cooperation at the local level. Over the past six months, citizen leader Blair Forlaw has profiled instances of bipartisan cooperation in all 50 states.
"Welcome back, Congress! During your recess, we marked the anniversary of Osama bin Laden’s death. It was an anniversary well worth marking, and America is safer with the world’s most notorious terrorist out of commission. 9/11 occurred more than a decade ago. That’s a long time. But it has been even longer—sixteen years, to be precise—since Congress met the deadline for the appropriations bills needed to fund the government for the next fiscal year."