elections
20 articles tagged elections.
PoliticsBefore the Votes Are Counted, the Map Has Already Decided
The quiet craft of drawing district lines shapes election outcomes years before any ballot is cast
By Lena Holloway · Jun 29
PoliticsVoter Turnout Is the Most Cited and Least Understood Number in Politics
A single headline percentage hides who actually shows up to vote, who is quietly missing, and why the figure misleads parties and analysts alike
By Lena Holloway · Jun 28
PoliticsLate Ballot Design Changes Are Reshaping Down-Ballot Outcomes More Than Anyone Acknowledges
A series of small modifications to ballot layouts in several states has been treated as procedural housekeeping. The downstream consequences for down-ballot races are not procedural.
By Lena Holloway · Jun 4
OpinionThe Quiet Virtue of Covering the Unsexy Beat
An industry of policy coverage has organized itself around the photogenic beats. The unsexy beats produce most of the news that actually matters.
By Theresa Bauer · Jun 4
PoliticsState Attorneys General Are Coordinating Differently. The Pattern Is Worth Watching.
A coordination posture across several state attorneys general has shifted from issue-by-issue alliances toward something more structural. The shift has implications beyond the immediate dockets.
By Lena Holloway · Jun 4
WorldEurope's Energy Storage Procurement Just Quietly Stopped Being a Pilot Program
A procurement cycle that closed last month was framed as another iteration on the previous template. The terms tell a different story.
By Rafael Mendez · Jun 3
PoliticsThe Special Master Quietly Rewriting a State's Midterm Map
A redistricting order that drew limited press attention has handed a court-appointed mandate that will shape the next two cycles. The terms of reference are the story.
By Lena Holloway · Jun 3
PoliticsThe Late-Quarter Filing Pattern That Tells You More Than the Headline Totals
Aggregate numbers from the quarterly campaign-finance reports drew the usual coverage. The pattern inside the filings carries more signal than the totals do.
By Lena Holloway · Jun 3
PoliticsThe Quiet Bipartisan Coalition Already Forming Around the Next Court Seat
A federal vacancy that nobody expected to become contested is drawing an unusual cross-aisle response. What the early signals reveal about the confirmation ahead.
By Lena Holloway · Jun 2
PoliticsThe Tuesday Vote That Will Decide a Late-Session Election Infrastructure Fight
A state legislature heads into a compressed window on rules that determine how the next several cycles are actually administered. The procedural posture is the story.
By Lena Holloway · Jun 2
TechnologyThe Open-Source AI Milestone That Quietly Removes an Enterprise Excuse
A tooling release this week closes the gap practitioners had been pointing to for two cycles. The enterprise adoption argument now looks different.
By Priya Chen · Jun 2
WorldThe UN Reform Proposals Quietly Clustering Around One Idea
Across several proposals from very different blocs, the same procedural mechanism keeps appearing. That convergence is the story.
By Lena Holloway · May 30
OpinionProcurement Reform Is the Most Undervalued Lever in Government
Almost every other reform passes through procurement at some point. Improving the procurement layer therefore improves everything downstream.
By Diego Arroyo · May 30
PoliticsThe Unfashionable Case for Incremental Governance Reform
The reforms that compound are rarely the reforms that win press cycles. That is exactly why they deserve more political room than they currently get.
By Diego Arroyo · May 30
PoliticsThe Civilian Oversight Reset That Almost Nobody Reported
A new charter quietly redefined what oversight committees can actually compel and what they cannot. The fine print is what matters.
By Lena Holloway · May 30
PoliticsIt Is Time to End the Imperial Recess Calendar
The legislative calendar was designed for a country that no longer exists. Pretending otherwise is producing the politics we keep complaining about.
By Diego Arroyo · May 30
PoliticsInside the Bargain That Closed the Cabinet Retreat
Why the framework that emerged is meaningfully narrower than the one ministers walked in with, and what got quietly parked to make any deal possible.
By Lena Holloway · May 30
PoliticsThe Regulatory Rollback Wave Just Hit a Wall It Didn't See Coming
Why the agencies that moved fastest are now the ones being told to slow down, and what the courts are quietly telling everyone else.
By Lena Holloway · May 30
PoliticsThe Ethics Commission Overhaul No One Bothered to Publicize
A package of procedural changes moved through without a press conference. Practitioners say it is the most consequential reform of the decade.
By Lena Holloway · May 30
PoliticsThe Quiet Grant That Will Decide Whether Half the Country Modernizes
A small federal program is funding the boring infrastructure work that determines whether voting modernization actually happens, or just gets talked about.
By Lena Holloway · May 30