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#Partisanship
Milhouse Van Houten đ
Milhouse_Van_Ho
Thanks to this lockdown, I am leaving the left. I voted for Trudeau and used to be annoyed by Trump. I now realize how naive I was - true liberalism
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Rob Ford
robfordmancs
My analysis of this week's elections for the Observer - Brexit may be done but the aftershocks of the referendum are still reverberating through England in the form of shifting
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Keith Ng
keith_ng
Spare a thought for everyone who has to write analysis of a uniformly unambiguous result, and they're not allowed to say "people liked Jacinda that's why Labour won lots of
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Dan Gardner
dgardner
I agree with all of this (minus âmisleadingâ â Wimbledonâs challenge was same in kind, though vastly easier). Itâs an epic poem of a subject and I had space for
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Ariel Edwards-Levy
aedwardslevy
Because this is a good use of time on Saturday night, I want to just pull out this 2016 post-mortem from the pollsters' professional org (full disclosure, I'm a member),
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Oliver Willis
owillis
If you care about the direction of the country you can't just ignore Tucker Carlson and Fox News and hope for the best. Without social media amplification, Fox influences millions
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Chris C
premillenial
I thought it weird to call Supreme Court expansion "court packing" until I came across the GOP's 2nd most important long game strategy. Court packing is a more reasonable umbrella
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Drew G. I. Hart, PhD
DruHart
For those looking around, everything has been laid bare for all to see. The curtain is pulled back & we can see the Beast. Evil systems of exploitation, economic inequity,
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Alexander Clarkson
APHClarkson
A politico-media leadership faction whose first instinct when under the pressure of system crisis is to attack the mediahttps://twitter.com/montie/status/1254493692137791488 You still have solid polling leads. You have some room for
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Josh Huder
joshHuder
We're so primed to think of politics through the lens of partisan conflict that stories describe a bill passing near unanimously as "bitterly partisan," and stylize week+ long negotiations as
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Stewart Prest
StewartPrest
I think it's likely that we'll see a reordering of alliances. Countries will make new decisions on what allies can be trusted, and on what fronts. This process was already
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Walter Shaub
waltshaub
As the pandemic has shown, Trump hasn't gotten better at governing. He prefers loyalty over merit. But 3 years' worth of experience has made him better at corruption. He's weakening
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Ariz Kader
KaderAriz
I don't follow Libya closely anymore. Honestly, following Iraq and Syria are depressing enough most of the time.But when I read articles on the state by some of its supposed
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Brynn Tannehill
BrynnTannehill
Several semi-related observations about Joe Biden. First... the polling data looks better for him than it did for Clinton. He's held a remarkably consistent lead. Clinton did not, and it
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Hussain Abdul-Hussain đşđ¸
hahussain
Thread- @washingtonpost today: "âThis is what happens when we normalize anti-Muslim and anti-Islamic speech and discrimination â a hijab ban that violates religious freedom. Regulating Muslim womenâs bodies in the
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Tsiehta âď¸
Tsiehta
1- I like smart people, maybe itâs because I am as dumb as a bag of hammers. Check out my Twitter feed, Iâm subject to hysteria, partisanship and extreme hyperbole.
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