Showing results for: Elizabeth Warren (page 85)
In Senate races, candidates tackle the blame game
Christina A. Cassidy, Adam BeamSpitting on the working poor: Living wage surcharges and the nickel-and-diming of America
Peter-Astrid Kane
Minimum wage hikes are a great idea. But here's how corporations and the right hope to make America hate them
Secret audio nails Mitch! Endangered McConnell busted humiliating himself on tape
Joan Walsh
A GOP Senate, he promised, would slash funds to the ACA, Dodd-Frank and the EPA, and block a minimum wage hike
“Potential upset of the century”: Zephyr Teachout’s lesson for Andrew Cuomo
Joan Walsh
The Dean 2004 vet explains why she’s running for NY governor -- and how the left can take over the Democratic Party
Hillary’s overlooked ’16 worry: Will she write off the anti-interventionist left again?
Joan Walsh
For all the talk about her positioning around inequality, her foreign policy may alienate voters she needs in '16
Welcome to TV hell: 8 things you learn watching Sarah Palin’s insane new channel
Janet Allon
We watched so you don't have to
Sarah Palin’s rant on liberals, fast food and hell makes no sense
Prachi Gupta
Preview content from her new unfiltered online channel -- for free!
Jon Stewart is not enough: The curse of centrism, and why the Tea Party keeps rolling “Daily Show” Democrats
Thomas Frank
It's easy to take shots and laugh at the know-nothing right. But our smirks let complicit Democrats off the hook
“They don’t have the courage”: How the two-party system aided Israel disaster
Elias Isquith
To get principled responses to humanitarian crises, break up DC's pro-Israel status quo, leading socialist explains
GOP’s “toxic” laundering scheme: How echoes of Jack Abramoff are emerging
Heather Digby Parton
Group of GOP power brokers demonstrates the party's penchant for fleecing Indian tribes and Christian conservatives
Paul Krugman cheers the Obama victory everyone else forgot
Elias Isquith
The New York Times columnist says Dodd-Frank is working — even if the mainstream media hasn't noticed
“I could kick his butt”: Why Mitch McConnell is in serious trouble
Shannon Eblen
At Kentucky's Fancy Farm picnic, GOP minority leader tested out a tricky strategy: Make his campaign not about him
Great for the Tea Party, bad for the people: How the 1 percent conquered Internet activism
Micah Sifry
Web democracy fail: Easy to join the conversation but impossible to be heard, and big money speaks loudest of all
Is Hillary Clinton the true heir of Ronald Reagan?
Andrew O'Hehir
Not since 1980 has a candidate seemed so unstoppable -- and Hillary resembles the Gipper in other ways too
Hillary Clinton vs. Elizabeth Warren: They have less in common than you think
David Sirota
Hillary's political allies want Democratic primary voters to believe she's a real populist. It's simply not true
Right wing’s worst nightmare: The master stroke that turns red states blue
Paul Rosenberg
Our divisions are phony: There's broad agreement on more issues. Here's how we convert the Tea Party
Why do we vilify low-income black women simply for being mothers?
Kirsten West Savali
Debra Harrell was criminalized for letting her kid play in the park. Her real crime: Being a poor, black woman
My party has lost its soul: Bill Clinton, Barack Obama and the victory of Wall Street Democrats
Bill Curry
A former Clinton aide on how Democrats lost their way chasing Wall Street cash, and new populism the party needs
Too big to fail banks want to make amends with poor people
Lynn Stuart Parramore
Bank of America and others claim they want to offer poor people low-cost banking services. Don't hold your breath
Noam Chomsky vs. Al Franken: Behind the odd progressive divide between senators, intellectuals on Gaza
David Palumbo-Liu
Senate progressives join unanimous resolution backing Israel, but the reaction has been different elsewhere on left
“We don’t want politicians who’ve gotta be cajoled”: Keith Ellison unloads to Salon
David Dayen
Liberal congressman Keith Ellison tells us about Obama's legacy, saving Detroit and how he feels about Warren '16
Worst sales pitch ever: The ad industry’s shameless history of using feminism to sell products
Andi Zeisler
In the age of "empowertising," it's worth asking whether feminism should be treated as a brand at all
GOP’s ’16 consolation vanishes: Suddenly, Democrats have the deep bench!
Joan Walsh
After Romney’s 2012 loss, pundits raved about the GOP’s new leaders. But two years later, Democrats have the edge
Battleground voters’ rage: In which any endorsement will only backfire
Jim Newell
Battleground voters are skeptical of Congress and most politicians. And no endorsement's going to change that
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