Senator Elizabeth Warren’s call for analyzing how policies affect marginalized communities reminds us that strong, effective policies depend on sound data.
— Angela Yu
Read MoreSenator Elizabeth Warren’s call for analyzing how policies affect marginalized communities reminds us that strong, effective policies depend on sound data.
— Angela Yu
Read MoreWhile perhaps intended as a semi-cheeky rhetorical jab at the political opposition undermining her party’s legislative agenda, the comment encapsulated a far more profound sentiment in my eyes. It served as a diagnosis of the increasingly regressive nature of partisan politics in 21st Century American democracy.
— Zach Fotiadis
Herein lies the paradox of electability: by thinking that someone is unlikely to be elected, and therefore not voting for them, you yourself are making it impossible for them to win.
— Lindsey Gradowski
Read MoreWith an average favorability of less than 43%, down from his peak of 57% around the 100 day mark, Biden’s present popularity stands as the second lowest of any president at this point in their administration since the origins of national polling.
— Zach Fotiadis
Read MoreA work requirement will significantly diminish the effectiveness of the Child Tax Credit by requiring recipients to endure administrative burdens.
— Takuya Amagai
Read MorePresident Biden’s Build Back Better frameworks puts the nation one step closer to realizing access to nutritious food as a basic human right.
— Cade Spencer
Read MoreOn the Record asked 25 Georgetown students how America can build back better. Here’s 25 ideas they have for a reimagined America.
— Carly Kabot
Read MoreAfter a year of political turmoil in New York following the resignation of Governor Andrew Cuomo, a bitterly contested mayoral primary and an ongoing struggle between progressives and moderate Democrats, the state is at an electoral crossroads.
— Andrew Morin
Read MoreIn an attempt to lower the price tag of the Build Back Better plan, the White House has cut tuition-free community college from the spending bill. The decision to sacrifice tuition free community college in exchange for a cheaper spending bill may end up costing the American government more in the long run in unemployment benefits and economic stimuli.
— Katie Cooper
In a blow to Democrats nationwide, former governor Terry McAuliffe conceded the Virginia gubernatorial race to Republican hopeful Glenn Youngkin in the morning following Election Day. A race that many in the Democratic Party once saw as safe, considering McAuliffe’s name recognition and Biden’s over ten-point margin of victory in the state in 2020, has now potentially become the nightmare scenario for the party ahead of the 2022 midterms.
— Zach Fotiadis
Read MoreU.S. humanitarian aid to Lebanon is a step in the right direction to helping the nation get back on it’s feet , but Lebanon’s recovery from economic crisis, Beirut blast, and COVID-19 will be slow.
— Rajaa Bint Talal
Read MoreA key state for Democrats, the race to be Atlanta’s next mayor is heating up.
— Maya Smith
Read MoreAs workers across America left the workforce in big numbers this August, workers now have an opportunity to flex power at the bargaining table for better wages, benefits and conditions that have been long overdue since before the pandemic.
— Nick Gonzalez
Read MoreWhat happens when a civilian reporter’s life gets wrapped up in bilateral nuclear power negotiations? To what extent does valuing an individual’s survival compare with the impending threat of violent conflict? For Jason Rezaian, these questions were not hypotheticals to be debated among international relations scholars or on the nightly news. Rather, the answers to them were the only bridge between a life trapped inside an eight-by-four foot cell and freedom.
— Mia Young
Read MoreRunning to be Florida’s first Latina governor, State Senator Annette Taddeo is changing all the race’s established dynamics as she launches her bid.
— Eric Bazail-Eimil
Read MoreGiven Democrats’ narrow majority in the House, Florida’s new Congressional district, and the redrawing of borders that will follow, could hand Republicans the Speakership in 2023.
— Zach Fotiadis
Read MoreNicaragua and Colombia went before the International Court of Justice in September 2021 as the first step towards resolving alleged violations of Nicaraguan sovereignty in the Caribbean.
— Riley Swain
Read MoreRedistricting in Kansas could force force Kansas Rep. Sharice Davids out of her seat, giving a leg up to Republican candidates in the 2022 midterm elections.
— Katie Cooper
Read MoreAs Africa lags on vaccine access, the United States is ignoring its moral imperative to collaborate with African governments and support equitable vaccine distributions on the continent.
— Eric Bazail-Eimil
Read MoreAfter a long, demoralizing, and deadly few months, the Biden administration has taken on a new strategy for propelling the country out of the clutches of COVID-19. President Biden did the right thing in acknowledging vaccine mandates as the only possible way forward; implementing them despite significant pushback is a feat of both public health competence and human empathy.
— Mia Young
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