November 1, 2024 • On their final Friday roundtable before election day, Marisa, Scott and Guy share their top under-the-radar races they're following and discuss the biggest burning questions ...
Perhaps you’ve heard there’s a presidential election coming up? One that may, in fact, be the single most important referendum on our way of government in our lifetime? It is a reality that ...
Given that, what better way to distract yourself from the doomscrolling than by binge-watching a political TV show, offering a dive into a fictional universe. From the romanticism of Aaron Sorkin ...
But the chart above points to a partial explanation: For most Americans, race is a less significant political force than many progressives believe it is — and economic class is more significant.
But 44% of users who chose to answer a matching question on their political beliefs chose “other” among the options of “politically liberal,” “politically moderate” and “politically ...
According to AdImpact, an advertising analytics firm that tracks political advertising, projects a record $10.2 billion will be spent across all races in 2024. This would be an over 13% increase ...
In November 2023, Meta announced that it would require advertisers to reveal whether their political ads on its platforms have any AI-generated or digitally altered content. Meta's move followed a ...
Now, in the final weeks of the campaign, researchers have just published new findings about the social lives of people who are likely to endorse using political violence, and be willing to use it ...
In 2018, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of a group of Minnesota Tea Party supporters who argued that the state’s ill-defined ban on apparel with “political” messages was too broad.
Facebook, Instagram, Google and YouTube are clamping down on political ads in an effort to combat misinformation that could undermine trust in the results of a contentious election or stir up unrest.
Neither of the two big political parties in Washington gives a hoot about it except as a tool to virtue-signal—usually right before an election. Comedian Tony Hinchcliffe’s reference to Puerto ...
By Kellina Moore The stage has always been a political setting, whether explicitly or implicitly. The lights go down, and confrontation and conflict ensues. With the U.S. presidential election ...