RawStory

Opinion

Commercial TV made Trump a political star. He alone made himself a loser.

The postmortem on this election will be brutal. Almost none of the participants -- candidates, campaign managers, consultants, the political parties, the press in its many manifestations, even those mostly innocent pollsters -- will escape unscathed. They've all helped give our quadrennial ritual a massive black eye before a can't-believe-it's-happening world. Some more than others, it's…

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Robert Reich: Trump isn't alone -- the entire GOP has spent decades trying to destroy trust in the American system

Donald Trump’s warning that he might not accept the results of the presidential election exemplifies his approach to everything: Do whatever it takes to win, even if that means undermining the integrity of the entire system.

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Paul Krugman: The real reason Clinton is winning is not what the pundits tell you

It's not exactly a secret that Paul Krugman has been a Hillary Clinton supporter in this election. On Friday, the columnist examines what her strong debate performances and now apparent large lead reveal about her, and dispels what he sees as the fiction that she is a "terrible candidate."

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How Donald Trump inadvertently gave 'nasty' women their voices

When I was younger, and New York City’s 42nd Street a seedier version, I used to contort my face as I moved through the crowds trying to make myself as unattractive as possible. That way, I wouldn’t be groped. Or have some weirdo begging to have sex with me.

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Does Donald Trump have a plan to defeat democracy?

I know that it’s way, way, way too late to try to do any serious deconstruction of a Donald Trump performance, but, like Trump on a debate stage, I can’t help myself. Somehow, even though I know better, I hold to the notion that a presidential election, even this one, must be a serious affair.

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Here is why John McCain has hit a new low with his destructive politics

"I promise you that we will be united against any Supreme Court nominee that Hillary Clinton, if she were president, would put up,” Senator John McCain said on a radio interview in Pennsylvania on Monday. “I promise you. This is where we need the majority.”

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A one-time GOP strategist explains what Paul Ryan has to do if he really gives a damn about America

In a bitterly divided and polarized political environment, what are we to do to bring the country together on Nov. 8 and onward? How is anyone going to be able to lead us in this era of wrenching cultural, political and economic fissures?

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Here are the important topics that will be missing from tonight's presidential debate

If you plan to tune in tonight to watch the final presidential debate, you probably won’t hear anything about some of our country’s most pressing concerns, like climate change, poverty and campaign finance. Again.

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Here's why it's in our economic self-interest to keep an open door to immigrants

During the 2016 presidential campaign, no substantive area has highlighted the differences between the two main candidates as much as immigration. As the Council on Foreign Relations puts, it “[f]ew issues provide more grist for debate in Washington and on the campaign trail.” As a result, immigration is certain to resurface as a prominent partisan fault line over the coming weeks leading to election day.

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One real voting problem is actually the opposite of the dire scenarios Trump is fabricating

While Donald Trump blathers on about a rigged election — a theory downplayed by a wide range of experts and his own running mate — and urges vigilance against hordes of undocumented people casting imaginary ballots, one real problem with this year’s electoral process is the opposite of the dire scenarios the GOP nominee is conjuring up.

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Inequality is the most important challenge facing the next president -- but nobody is talking about it

In a recent issue of The Economist, President Barack Obama set out four major economic issues that his successor must tackle. As he put it:

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Here is why Donald Trump’s racism and his misogyny are not two separate issues

Pity the male white supremacist: he began the year hopeful that a man who made no attempts to hide his racist rhetoric would ride white resentment all the way to the highest office in the land. But now, with three weeks until the general election, the great white behemoth is sinking under the rain of harpoons launched by angry women, and no matter how they try to spin the numbers, Donald Trump cannot win the election with the sole support of white men.

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