Some Democrats are calling out their far-left colleagues for costing them the 2024 election with radical rhetoric.
More people ended up voting for Trump, even though many didn’t like him, because they liked the Democratic Party less.
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A New York Times report acknowledged that identity politics no longer has a "grip on the country" after it peaked in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd in 2020. This election, many ...
Jacobin on MSN14d
Identity Crisis
At July’s Republican National Convention, J. D. Vance reported that there is a class struggle — and he knows which side he’s ...
Despite Donald Trump’s abrasive and disrespectful style and endless personal attacks, the majority of Americans this week chose him to be the next president. Their reasons are simple. Many feel ...
Check if you have access via personal or institutional login 'Yorùbá Identity and Power Politics' covers the major issues on Yorùbá history and politics, thus offering a solid understanding of one of ...
Former President Trump’s election Tuesday instantly rewrote the playbook for pursuing the Hispanic electorate, burying immigration and identity politics as gateway issues for the Latino vote.
It coincides with autumn in the northern hemisphere and comes from the African-American Vernacular English (AAVE ... Eighty ...
Today’s left deploys Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and identity politics to create an anti-American narrative in the ...
Some Democrats are finally waking up and realizing that woke is broke. Donald Trump won a majority of white women and remarkable numbers of Black and Latino voters and young men. Democratic ...
A New York Times report admitted that far-left policies were "never broadly popular" while discussing the backlash since 2020 to woke politics and rhetoric.