A new analysis by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) shows how megadonor Harlan Crow gave millions to right-wing dark money groups.
Behind the recent wave of restrictive voting laws is a well-funded network of dark money groups pushing a longstanding agenda to undermine the freedom to vote.
No one got everything they wanted. President Biden didn’t get the clean debt ceiling increase he had insisted on for months. Republicans didn’t get most of what they sought—though they did get some of it.
This "debt ceiling" isn't a crisis. It is a plot: a cynical political and media strategy devised by Republicans in the 1970s, fine-tuned in the 1980s, and rolled out every time a Democrat is in the White House.
The billionaires and large corporations backing "No Labels" are deeply invested in maintaining the status quo and opposing Democrats' agenda for working people.
Election administrators are still digging out from the mountains of misinformation from the 2020 election cycle. Bad actors are using AI to ramp up for the next one.
J. D. Vance speaking with attendees at the 2021 Southwest Regional Conference hosted by Turning Point USA at the Arizona Biltmore in Phoenix, Arizona. Photo: Gage Skidmore, Wiki Commons
Despite the White House's lofty rhetoric, it is actively bolstering the military power of a majority of the world's authoritarian countries, from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to dozens of others.
Arizona's hard right election deniers, Paul Gosar and Kari Lake, traveled to Budapest to revel in the latest Hungarian edition of the far-right CPAC conference—held there in admiration of defacto dictator Viktor Orban.
It is impossible not to unsee the blatant corruption of the Supreme Court through the connections of Clarence Thomas and his wife Ginni and the far-right influencers feeding them money and gifts.
Sinclair Broadcast Group, known for requiring stations to broadcast far right propaganda, recently announced plans to eliminate entire local newsrooms at local-television stations in five broadcast areas.