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It's because of instances like this that Shea, who describes herself as solidly left-wing, draws a hard line when it comes to ...
In an era of deep political polarization, a new study indicates that many members of Congress may be out of step not just ...
Single men and women may be becoming more polarized politically, but marriage is bringing them together.
Gun rights are another obvious example of partisan polarization, and last week, the Supreme Court issued a decision on the subject along the dreaded conservative-liberal axis.
The results found young men and women split on multiple partisan fronts, including party identity and who they voted for in the 2024 presidential election.
The fight between Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene and Jasmine Crockett proved than anything men can do — like fighting in Congress — women can do, and better.
Members of Congress let the White House and the courts do their job for them, relishing the chance to gripe when they do it wrong or take credit when they do it right.
Young men and women are taking the 'gender gap' to staggering new levels The gulf between Gen Z men and women on political and cultural issues is far wider than it is in older generations.
A majority of men under 30 support former President Trump and Republican control of Congress, a sharp reversal from the 2020 race. Young women strongly favor Democrats.
Partisan polarization is bad for the nation; but partisan polarization that correlates ever more with sex is likely to prove even worse.
Bridge Pledge's non-partisan scoring system blends 15 metrics from six 3rd party public sources to score Congress members on a bridging and dividing scale from 0 to 100.