Robin Winston: Focus on issues leads to big 2018 turnout
The constant debate over pre-existing conditions, jobs and immigration mattered.
The constant debate over pre-existing conditions, jobs and immigration mattered.
Politics is an amazing, yet perplexing, profession. I have often wondered why President Obama trails Mitt Romney by a large margin in rural areas.
On Nov. 6, all eyes will be on several battleground states. Unfortunately, the pundits will miss one of the most important states that will contribute to an Obama victory—Indiana. While some will debate whether the president will win Indiana (I still contend that he can), keep in mind that several Indiana-related items will play a role in the fall campaign and will have an impact in other parts of the country.
I am the parent of a seventh-grader who looks forward to this school year with excitement, hope and a sense of optimism. Unfortunately, many of her peers do not share those thoughts. I am particularly concerned about African-American males.
Here in central Indiana, we have the perfect opportunity to make improvements to our mass transit system.
Labor learned valuable lessons from Wisconsin.
African-American voters are proud of this president.
Thirty percent of Hispanics proclaim to be liberal. Only 21 percent of the general population self identify as liberal.
Would your business consistently do things to alienate 54 percent of its customers?
Mays’ efforts at community involvement saved The Indianapolis Recorder.
If you are going to go after an incumbent who already has online traction, then the order of the day is “Tweet early, tweet often.”
In 2011, we witnessed what happens when Republicans cut into the Democratic margin in Marion County.
Goodnight combines the attributes of Obama and Vice President Biden.
When President Obama proposes the same type of legislation, his detractors claim that he is a socialist and a practitioner of class warfare.
Religion has a role in politics. It can provide the civility that is missing from today’s campaigns.
We don’t need a statue of a slave to remind us of our history.
Many voters I talked with wanted to send a wakeup call to politicians of both parties that they should heed the words of Jim Carville to then-candidate Bill Clinton in 1992: “It’s the economy, stupid.”