Good Authority’s top 10 posts of 2024 John Sides - December 27, 2024 Here is what got the most attention from readers.
Poll results depend on pollster choices as much as voters’ decisions Josh Clinton - October 28, 2024 Simple changes in how to weight a single poll can move the Harris-Trump margin 8 points.
Why Javier Milei won and why he’ll struggle to keep his promises Adrián Lucardi, Noam Lupu, and Jorge Mangonnet - November 24, 2023 There are big barriers to his sweeping agenda for Argentina.
A transition for TMC (The Monkey Cage): Moving on from The Washington Post Laura Seay, Nadia E. Brown, Marc Lynch, Kim Yi Dionne, Joshua Tucker, John Sides, Jeremy Wallace, Jessica Chen Weiss, Henry Farrell, Elizabeth N. Saunders, Christopher Stout, Bryn Rosenfeld, Sarah Binder, Amanda Hollis-Brusky, and Stacie Goddard - December 5, 2022 We’re grateful to The Post and excited about our next chapter
Chile’s new voting rules may have derailed the new Constitution Lautaro Cella and Eli Rau - September 15, 2022 Many who voted ‘No’ still want a new constitution — just not this one
Kansas voted for abortion rights. What does that mean for the midterms? Susan Stokes, Radha Sarkar, and Eli Rau / Managing Editor - August 24, 2022 The Kansas abortion rights vote shows, yet again, that red-state voters are unhappy with extremist legislative politics.
How politically divided is the U.S.? It’s complicated but quantifiable. Mary Catherine Sullivan and John Geer - June 6, 2022 Our new measure of national unity examines shifts over decades
How do North and South Americans view the U.S.? Dinorah Azpuru - June 2, 2022 Leaders are gathering for the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles
Like Breonna Taylor, Black women are often killed in private — even when it’s by police Shatema Threadcraft - March 21, 2022 Police and prison violence against Black women can be seen as an extension of intimate partner violence
Would Americans ever support a coup? 40 percent now say yes. Noam Lupu, Luke Plutowski, and Elizabeth Zechmeister - January 3, 2022 That percentage jumped significantly since 2017 and includes more than half the Republicans we surveyed.