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Vanishing Bipartisanship

Warren Rudman has spent years perfecting the art of bipartisanship. Called a “consensus-forging leader” by Senator Olympia Snowe, Rudman, who served two terms as a U.S. senator from New Hampshire (1980– 92), is well-known for his role in bipartisan deficit reduction and, more recently, for his work on the United States Commission on National Security, […]

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Courting Trouble

Judging from the views of my respected co-authors in this report, American democracy stands indicted for its performance in November’s election. Yet in several important respects, the system performed better in 2004 than it has in years. That’s not easy for me to say after such a disheartening election day. But you cannot measure the […]

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Whither the Ward Heelers?

Shortly after the McCain-Feingold bill passed Congress in 2002, the smart money was all on the big money: Mega-wealthy donors to the new “527s” would dominate the new political era just as they had dominated the last. Sure enough, such progressive donors as George Soros did make huge contributions to the 527s. But the smart […]

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2004: A Report Card

Americans know the 2000 election was a fiasco. What they don’t know is that the 2004 election, in many ways, might have been even worse. The purported margin of victory in November has led many to believe that the process went relatively smoothly. But the appearance of a smooth election obscured troubling developments, from simple […]

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America Observed

Few noticed, but in the year 2000, Mexico and the United States traded places. After nearly two centuries of election fraud, Mexico’s presidential election was praised universally by its political parties and international observers as free, fair, and professional. Four months later, after two centuries as a model democracy, the U.S. election was panned as […]

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You’re Doing Fine, Oklahoma!

Thirty years ago, the national movement for universal preschool came heart-breakingly close to success. But Richard Nixon’s 1971 veto of such a measure — it “would commit the vast moral authority of the National Government to the side of communal approaches to child rearing over against the family-centered approach” — proved to be Washington’s last […]

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Too Young to Test

Last fall and again in the spring, the government administered a standardized literacy and math test to all children in the Head Start program. It’s being given again this year. Four-year-olds are asked to count objects, name alphabet letters and simple geometrical shapes, understand directions, characterize facial expressions, and identify animals, body parts, and other […]

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Leave No Parent Behind

Forty years ago, as Marian Wright Edelman and her fellow pioneers at the Child Development Group of Mississippi were organizing sharecroppers, fending off Jim Crow, and cobbling together a model for the nation’s Head Start program, Betty Hart and Todd Risley were up in Kansas City working on an early childhood program of their own. […]

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