States, Flush with Cash, Still Face Tough Issues
From Medicaid to immigration, state lawmakers grapple with contentious issues as elections loom.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
From Medicaid to immigration, state lawmakers grapple with contentious issues as elections loom.
Forty years after a Time cover famously asked, “Is God Dead?” polls find the Almighty thriving in the nation’s collective consciousness.
The differences that divide us are much smaller than those that set us apart from the rest of the world
Allegations of corruption are fueling political discontent among independents, who are unhappy with Congress in general and their own representatives in particular.
Many Americans do not fit well within into either the conservative or liberal camps. Instead they find a home in one of two other U.S. political traditions, libertarian and populist, or defy attempts to pigeon-hole them.
Beyond partisanship — and behind those healthy economic indicators — Americans may be seeing something that most economists overlook.
The Center’s report offers a richly textured portrait of the American electorate, including a new analysis of 2004 election returns that reveals the congruence between where people live and how they vote.
Testimony to U.S. House International Relations Committee, Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
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