After the days spent traveling New Hampshire in search of novel insights prognosticating the coming months of our political spectacle, of inroads to the minds of candidates and organizers seeking leadership roles in our market of ideas and government jobs, to compare the frame of mind of the wide-eyed visiting volunteers and resident voters of outsize influence with those in my home community, and to generally learn whether I could fairly expect my anxieties to be quieted by our process, I was left vexed.
Iowa
ANALYSIS: WILL WARREN’S CAMPAIGN REFLECT THE BACKDROP OF HER LAWRENCE ANNOUNCEMENT?
While the perception of a polarizing political figure dominates the media narrative surrounding the candidate, Warren has shown that her positions and emphasis on popular issues can be a boon for her campaign.
WHAT SENATOR WARREN’S MIXED ELECTION BAG COULD MEAN FOR HER PRESIDENTIAL ASPIRATIONS
Even if she isn’t everybody’s first choice, the prospect of a President Warren—a proponent of stiff corporate regulations, an increased minimum wage, student debt forgiveness, and single-payer health care—is still intriguing on the left.
MANCHESTER DIVIDED: WHAT HAPPENED TO HILLARY?
Watching Clinton answer questions about Black Lives Matter and Muslim Americans
MANCHESTER DIVIDED: FIRST IN LINE FOR BERNIE
Enduring patchouli and the Secret Service for Sanders
MANCHESTER DIVIDED: SEIU ‘FIGHTS FOR $15’ IN NH WHILE ITS CANDIDATE FIGHTS FOR $12
What doesn't make sense is why SEIU pulled out 500 people onto a chilly windswept hill in suburban New Hampshire to protest for a laudable reform that their chosen presidential candidate, Hillary Clinton, absolutely does not support.
MANCHESTER DIVIDED: DUTCH UNCLES
Election-watching guests from The Hague give U.S. a vote of confidence over Russia, China
MANCHESTER DIVIDED: PODIUM PANDEMONIUM WITH ‘THE DAILY SHOW’
Trevor Noah does a debate about debates in New Hampshire
MANCHESTER DIVIDED: SAM WATERSTON WANTS MONEY OUT OF POLITICS
"What you want is a free flow of information so government knows what’s happening with the people."
MANCHESTER DIVIDED: ‘THE CAN’T-IDATES’
So, about those 1,500-plus people running for POTUS