New data is showing that working-class voters and Hispanic voters are polling nearly identically on progressive issues. And not in the Democrats’ favor.
It's not every day that a politician's gaffe perfectly encapsulates his or her party's growing separation from a community that has been a vital part of its electoral coalition.
The effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccine booster doses dropped well under 50 percent after four months against subvariants of the virus that causes COVID-19, according to a new study from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
A New York Supreme Court judge this month quietly ruled that regulations mandating that people infected with or exposed to highly contagious communicable diseases be quarantined are a violation of state law, declaring them null and void.
A majority of people in Texas and half the people in Louisiana want their states to peacefully break off from the increasingly corrupt federal United States government, according to polling data released by SurveyUSA. A full sixty percent of Texans would support secession, while half of Louisianians would support it, according to the numbers. Meanwhile, pro-secession sentiment is competitive with Tory sentiment in states including Alabama and Mississippi.
Republicans are actively courting Hispanic voters in key competitive House districts, hoping to peel away voters from Democrats repeating their historical pattern of investing little and late in reaching out to Latinos.