Brent Colburn on Sanders, Trump, and the Future of Campaigns

Brent Colburn has served as the Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs and the Chief of Staff of the Department of Housing and Urban Affairs. He was the National Communications Director for President Obama’s 2012 campaign. Colburn is currently a fellow at the Institute of Politics at Harvard University. Harvard Political Review: … Read more

The GOP’s Inability to Unite

Modern politics treats “Republicans” as interchangeable with “conservatives.” The conflation occurs from local levels to the national stage, such as when Jeb Bush declared that he will cut taxes and “apply conservative principles the right way [and], create an environment where everybody rises up.” While conservatism includes aspects of limited government intervention such as cutting … Read more

Small Surprises

Last week’s Democratic debate hosted in Las Vegas was an entertaining mixture of political theater, quips between the candidates, and most importantly, proof that a debate without the personal combat exchanges seen in the Republican debates is a much smarter debate. The civility of the discourse allowed the moderators to lean into the candidates about … Read more

From Across the Aisle

After watching the first Democratic presidential debate, I am sure of one thing: the race to succeed President Barack Obama and become the standard bearer of the Democratic Party has come down to two people. Assuming Vice President Biden does not throw his hat in the ring, the Democrats are left with the 67-year-old former … Read more

Practically the Same?

The Democratic frontrunners, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, expressed a variety of policy differences at the first Democratic debate. The biggest difference between the two presidential hopefuls, however, was a deeper ideological one. While Sanders championed his democratic socialist views, Clinton presented herself as a “progressive who wants to get things done.” This division is … Read more

Least of Five Evils

On Tuesday, October 13, at 8:30 p.m., the first of several Democratic primary debates kicked off, quite appropriately, in Las Vegas—the perfect location for the event’s despairing losers to gamble and drink away their pain. Despite nearly two hours of unenlightening, repetitive, circumlocutory debate, minimal new information came to light and no poll standings changed substantively. In spite … Read more

Chafee’s Chance

Former Governor of Rhode Island Lincoln Chafee had one of his only opportunities of the 2016 campaign to make a name for himself at last week’s Democratic Debate on CNN. In the shadow of the Clinton-Sanders battle, and with poll numbers hovering around one percent, Chafee had nothing to lose and everything to gain. At … Read more

Bernie’s Big Night

You might think little has changed in the state affairs of the Democratic primary race if you watched the post-debate coverage on CNN. The news agency, which hosted the debate in conjunction with Facebook at the Wynn Hotel in Las Vegas, largely portrayed the night as a successful one for Hillary Clinton, reaffirming her status … Read more

The Know Nothing Party: A Cautionary Tale

In an interview with talk show host Laura Ingraham, Rand Paul decided to singlehandedly change history. “I think assimilation is an amazing thing,” Senator Paul stated. “A good example of how, even in our country, assimilation didn’t happen—and it has been a disaster for the people—has been the Native American population on the reservations. If … Read more