“It’s me owing it back to not just my network but to my community to do well,” Joy Reid says.
”I feel a burden—I feel the burden to do it right.”
The women of MSNBC are reshaping the television landscape
Trying to Flip the House, ZIP Code by ZIP Code
“We had no idea what it would become,” Mr. Todras-Whitehill said. “But after our viral launch we suddenly didn’t have the 20,000 people we expected, but 200,000 expecting us to help them taking back the House. I knew that we would have to transform the organization into a professional one capable of delivering on that promise.”
With ‘Fire and Fury,’ Stephen Rubin Is Publishing’s 76-Year-Old Comeback Kid
Nicolle Wallace’s Road From the White House to 30 Rock
An ill and unhappy Jackie Robinson turned on Nixon in 1968
Baseball is staying out of politics this year. Like it does every year.
Hillary Clinton’s Lonesome White Male Supporters
He Likes Trump. She Doesn’t. Can This Marriage Be Saved?
Millennial Reporters Grab the Campaign-Trail Spotlight
Did John Boehner Just Pull Off A Brilliant Hustle?
Roger Stone Rides Donald Trump’s Well-Tailored Coattails
What's Next for Mike Bloomberg?
The Holy Cow! Candidate
Mitt Romney, the governor of Massachusetts, loves data, hates waste, and reveres Dwight Eisenhower. He's also the Next Big Thing in the Republican Party. But can anyone so clean-cut, so pure of character, and (by gosh!) so square overcome the "two Ms"—Mormonism and Massachusetts—to be our next president?
‘A very different nation’: The Romneys on life with George and the lesson of his derailed presidential bid
All Revved Up Over Michigan's Place in Politics
DETROIT -- On a steely cold Saturday morning, Debbie Dingell walks into a local UAW hall choked with people looking for answers. Tuesday's Michigan presidential primary -- one not recognized by the Democratic National Committee -- is only days away, and Democrats from the 13th Congressional District have assembled to ask what will happen when they walk into a polling booth where neither Barack Obama nor John Edwards is on the ballot.
Angry White Man
A Quiet Rainmaker
NEW YORK Inside the Park Avenue office of 38-year-old lawyer and Democratic heavyweight Bal Das, there are none of the usual artifacts of vanity. No grip-and-grin photos of him smiling brightly with Bill or Hillary Clinton, with Harold Ford Jr. or Dick Durbinor Ted Kennedy. Nor are there any hints of a family life -- no drawings by his son, no portraits of him and his wife holding each other closely at sunset at the home they still keep in Paris.