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- united states - Could Democrats take back the House of Representatives . . .
In 'Dems can take the House back in 60 days' a YouTube podcaster argues that via the three upcoming special elections (1 in New York and 2 in Florida) Democrats could take the House back by winning
- united states - Historical U. S. political party realignments . . .
Theoretical Context Duverger's law states that subject to certain conditions, a political system with single member district plurality vote candidate elections naturally tends towards having two, roughly equal, political parties
- Why is Colorado so different politically from nearby states?
In the 2018 midterms, Democrats gained control of Colorado’s Senate and elected a Democratic governor (the previous three governors were Democrats, too) However, nearby states like Utah and Wyoming
- united states - Where do the democratic and republican matched animal . . .
The democrats are commonly represented by a donkey and the republicans by an elephant and there's many articles that will explain which cartoonist created the associations in the 1870s
- ideology - Democratic Socialism vs Social Democracy - Politics Stack . . .
A social democrat, on the other hand, works within the capitalist regime for social and economic justice by interventions by the state This is more New Labour This is more New Labour For example, the way the current pandemic was controlled is by a classic social intervention - but writ large - and writ globally
- election - Why are Deep South states said to vote so lop-sidedly . . .
The state is 27% black In the exit poll black voters skewed 94% democrat (!) and white voters skewed 70% republican But the electorate was only 19% black There were significant numbers of black non-voters, resulting in a 54:40% win for Trump
- Why is Joe Manchin a member of the Democratic Party when he . . .
“Understand that Joe Manchin is a Roman Catholic Democrat in a state in which not a single county has voted Democrat [for president] since 2008,” Carville said “Politics is about choices and he’s up for re-election in 2024
- united states - Is it true that Jim Crow laws were primarily promoted . . .
Yes Following the American Civil War, the Democratic party was the primary haven for America's most machiavellian racists, (some of which set also included active criminals and terrorists), who labored tirelessly to subvert, frustrate, and stymie many of the postwar reforms, in a too often successful effort to continue a de facto slavery by other means and under other names
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