regional politics
42 articles tagged regional politics.
Late 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
State 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
The 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
The 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
The 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
The 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
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
PoliticsWhat the State Legislative Sessions Quietly Got Done This Spring
Across several states, the headline fights overshadowed a pattern of incremental wins that practitioners say will outlast the louder battles.
By Lena Holloway · May 30
PoliticsHow One Footnote in This Week's Campaign Finance Ruling Rewrites the Field
The headline ruling was narrow. The footnote that practitioners are circulating among themselves is anything but.
By Lena Holloway · May 30
PoliticsA Pattern Is Forming in How Federal Court Vacancies Are Being Left Open
Which seats are filling, which are not, and what the geography of the delays says about the deals being made elsewhere.
By Lena Holloway · May 30
PoliticsThe Voting Rights Coalition Just Quietly Abandoned Its Federal Strategy
Why a national group built on big federal lawsuits is taking its summer plan to the county clerks instead, and what that says about where the actual leverage lives.
By Lena Holloway · May 30
PoliticsThe Climate Bill Passed. The Cross-Aisle Defections Tell the Real Story.
Why a vote that looked party-line on paper was actually decided in two amendments most reporting missed.
By Lena Holloway · Oct 28
PoliticsThe Infrastructure Audit Quietly Indicts the Way States Estimate Cost
Inside a report that absolves the on-the-ground crews and points the finger at the political pressures shaping the numbers before any ground gets broken.
By Lena Holloway · Oct 25
PoliticsThe Capitol Is Quietly Losing the People Who Actually Write the Laws
Why congressional staff retention has fallen far enough to compromise the institution itself, and why both parties should treat it as a first-order concern.
By Diego Arroyo · Oct 18
PoliticsThe Governor's Race Looked Like a Coronation. The Field Workers Just Showed Up.
Why operatives wrote off this primary too early, and what the unaffiliated turnout numbers reveal about the last three weeks of the campaign.
By Lena Holloway · Oct 12
PoliticsThe Voting Rights Coalition Has One Week to Pick Its Next Fight
Inside the internal debate over which open questions belong in the courts and which belong on a statehouse calendar.
By Lena Holloway · Oct 6
PoliticsThe Cabinet Reshuffle Looks Small. The New Deputies on the Foreign Desk Are Not.
Two regional negotiations have been stuck for a year. They now have new principals on the diplomatic side, and the change is bigger than the press release suggests.
By Lena Holloway · Jul 2
PoliticsFilibuster Reform Is Back on the Table. Almost Nobody Is Talking About It.
Why a bipartisan working group is hunting for the smallest possible rule change that could actually clear both this floor and the next change of majority.
By Lena Holloway · Jun 16
PoliticsQuietly, a Dozen Statehouses Are Rewriting How Your Ballot Actually Gets Counted
The headlines are about access. The bills moving through state capitols are about something more boring and more consequential.
By Lena Holloway · Jun 8
PoliticsPollsters Just Quietly Rebuilt Their Methodology. The Last Cycle Is the Reason.
Why the major firms retired the screens that overrepresented some voters for a decade, and what consumers of polling should actually believe now.
By Lena Holloway · May 29
PoliticsThe Whistleblower Bill Passed. The Late Amendments Will Matter in Court.
Inside the trims that supporters call a workable compromise and that whistleblower attorneys say will be tested first by the rulemaking that follows.
By Lena Holloway · Apr 29
PoliticsThe Oversight Hearing Got Delayed Again. The Real Dispute Is Over Documents.
Inside the standoff over what the committee is allowed to see, what the agency is willing to release, and the secured-room compromise that may or may not hold.
By Lena Holloway · Dec 25
PoliticsThe School Funding Formula Is Being Rewritten Toward the Poorest Districts
Why the revisions cleared their first hurdle, where the losing districts are organizing, and what the phase-in fight will turn on.
By Lena Holloway · Dec 1
PoliticsVoter ID Lawyers Quietly Changed Tactics. The New Fight Is in the Footnotes.
Why the next wave of voter identification litigation looks nothing like the constitutional battles of the last decade, and what officials are saying privately about it.
By Lena Holloway · Nov 19
PoliticsHalf the Headline Bills Died. The Quiet Wins Are What Will Actually Show Up.
Why the workforce and housing measures that passed without press coverage may matter more than the bills that took the air out of the session.
By Lena Holloway · Nov 11
PoliticsExecutive Orders Have Become a Habit. Both Parties Should Be Worried.
Why governing by orders the next administration will reverse produces the appearance of action and the substance of stasis, and what a return to legislation would actually require.
By Diego Arroyo · Sep 25
PoliticsThe Ethics Report Substantiated One Allegation Out of Four. Nobody Is Happy.
Why the committee found the procedural violation but stopped short of the broader pattern, and what that pattern says about how these inquiries usually land.
By Lena Holloway · Sep 22
PoliticsThree States Tried Three Different Healthcare Models. They Got the Same Result.
Why the convergence is the policy story, and what the enabling conditions behind every successful pilot actually were.
By Lena Holloway · Sep 15
PoliticsFederal Lobbying Reform Is Stuck. Statehouses Are Quietly Doing It Themselves.
What the early state-level disclosure data reveals about lobbying spending that has spent years sitting below the federal reporting line.
By Lena Holloway · Aug 18
PoliticsThe Reconciliation Bill Is Already Being Trimmed Twice. Here Is Why.
Inside leadership's quiet arithmetic on which provisions survive, which get peeled into stand-alone bills, and which never had the votes to begin with.
By Lena Holloway · Jul 23
PoliticsThe New Map Just Dropped. Two Cities Are About to Look Politically Different.
What an independent commission did to long-fragmented urban neighborhoods, why dissenting commissioners filed, and how soon the lawsuits arrive.
By Lena Holloway · Jul 6
PoliticsThe Small-Dollar Donor Is Quietly Killing the Bundler in Competitive Races
Why the latest filings tell a different story about how political money is flowing, and what it changes for how candidates actually spend their time.
By Lena Holloway · May 15
PoliticsThe Special Prosecutor's Report Is Almost Ready. The Sequencing Is the Story.
Why the office is moving the document and finalizing the redactions in parallel, and what the receiving authorities have to decide next.
By Lena Holloway · Apr 6
PoliticsVA Clinics Are Quietly Triaging Patients. The Department's Own Reports Say So.
How regional managers are improvising around a staffing shortage that headquarters has not acknowledged on the timeline the field is actually working on.
By Lena Holloway · Apr 1
PoliticsSixty Federal Judgeships Sit Empty. Several Courts Are Now Officially in Crisis.
Why the confirmation calendar has fallen behind the rate of new vacancies, and what the affected courts are quietly giving up to keep cases moving.
By Lena Holloway · Mar 2
PoliticsWhat the GCC's Government Modernization Wave Has Actually Delivered
Several capitals moved on procurement, licensing, and digital identity at the same time. The operational results are starting to be visible.
By Lena Holloway · May 30