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Morris P. Fiorina is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Wendt Family Professor of Political Science at Stanford University. His current research focuses on elections and public opinion with particular attention to the quality of representation: how well the positions of elected...
Brown poised for massive upset
Polls across the board show Republican Scott Brown about to take the Massachusetts Senate seat that has been in the Kennedy clan since JFK. . . .
Stance Against Financial Bill Risky For GOP
Republican senators are offering a united front to block a Democratic bill that would revamp the rules for Wall Street. But the GOP's hard stand against the bill is not without political peril, party strategists warn...
Deteriorating relationships?
The average American citizen, contrary to myth, is neither very angry, nor very far to the left or the right, nor inclined to treat anyone with different opinions as a mortal enemy...
Rowdy protesters overrun health care meetings
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sent her chamber home for the summer recess with a list of talking points to respond to constituents' questions about pending health care legislation...
Do Pollsters Need Random Samples?
Whenever I'm asked to speak about polling, someone always asks about the Internet: When will pollsters start conducting their surveys online rather than by telephone?...
Vote could signal start of new-look GOP
Despite California's sorry status as an economic basket case, some GOP voices are suggesting, ever so hopefully, that the Golden State could be poised for a new profile - as the birthplace of a potential renaissance for the Republican Party...
10 Great Places to Retire for Democrats and Republicans
If you find yourself wanting to steal that McCain-Palin or Obama-Biden sign on your neighbor's lawn, you might want to factor that feeling in when you think about where you want to retire...
The New Political Geography of California
Dan Walters’ column in the Sac Bee is adapted from a chapter in The New Political Geography of California, published by Berkeley Public Policy Press and edited by Rose Institute Fellow Kenneth P. Miller...
America's vaunted 'culture war' is a mock battle
As the nation's attention reluctantly turns to the political parties' conventions, with their scripted suspense and stage-managed sentiment, it is important to keep in mind that these are phony representations of American political life...
The Facebook Election
The rally was held early in the Presidential cycle -- the first week of February 2007, a full 21 months before Election Day -- and its guest of honor wasn't yet an actual candidate...
Congressional conduct
As a crisis of confidence cascades through the financial world, a gnawing angst churns in everyone's stomach - are our leaders and political institutions capable of managing the complicated events rushing around us? ...
Red-blue divide? Hardly
In his speech at the 2004 Democratic convention, Barack Obama rejected the notion that Americans were entrenched in hostile camps of red states and blue states, insisting that we are "the United States of America..."
Palin Plans to Remain on GOP's National Stage
Even in defeat, John McCain bequeathed an invaluable gift to his running mate, Sarah Palin: the national prominence that could allow her to compete for the GOP's presidential nomination in 2012...
Stanford community donates generously to Obama
As an historic and historically lengthy election season reaches its frenzied final stages, activism, excitement and outrage have spiked on both sides of the political spectrum...
Stuck in the Middle With You
Even as abortion, the environment and immigration -- some of the perennials in politics -- are being used by interest groups to raise the decibel level and galvanize the left and the right, some of the presidential candidates are playing to the middle...
Schwarzenegger Bucks Democratic Trend
In the midst of a Democratic trend, one of the few bright spots for Republicans is California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who appears headed for a solid victory in his quest for reelection...
GOP's '94 'revolutionaries' among the fallen
When Republicans lost control of the House of Representatives on Tuesday, the most symbolic losses were those of several lawmakers who first arrived in Congress in 1994, the year their party took control of the House for the first time in 40 years...
Red and Blue Nation: How Deep is America's Political Divide?
On the heels of an election that shifted political party control of Congress, some observers insist that the nation remains a house divided into "red" states and "blue" states...
Beyond Red and Blue
During the long decade between pundit Pat Buchanan’s declaration of war and novelist Jane Smiley’s cry of anguish, the notion that America had split into two bitterly opposed political camps became as commonplace as apple pie...

