Hints and tips:
Related Special Reports
...Democrat Jon Ossoff, one of Georgia’s two US Senators, said the state’s boom was directly related to policies designed by the federal government....
...Anthony, the Democrat state senator, noted that at more than 81 per cent of the party’s voters, Biden remained in a commanding position in Michigan, despite the protest vote....
...Haley won between 34 and 44 per cent of the vote in three counties with major college campuses including the University of Michigan and Michigan State University, along with the smaller Kalamazoo College...
...Seventy-one per cent of Democrats said they approved of Biden’s handling of the economy, compared with just 5 per cent of Republican voters....
...Wisconsin has a strong agricultural economy, but it is women and young adults in college towns that Democrats think will carry their vote....
...“Thousands of Michigan Democrats who voted for Biden in 2020 now feel completely betrayed.” Michigan is a battleground state that has been decided by narrow margins in recent election cycles....
...On Monday, US college football will crown a national champion, when the University of Michigan takes on the University of Washington....
...Progressives are encouraging Minnesota Democrats to follow Michigan’s lead and vote “uncommitted” in Tuesday’s primary to sway President Joe Biden to support a ceasefire in Gaza....
...Forty-six per cent of voters surveyed in the FT-Michigan Ross poll said the US was spending too much on Ukraine aid while 35 per cent thought the country was spending about the right amount or not enough...
...Emeritus Professor Chris Hamnett Department of Geography, King’s College London, London WC2, UK...
...Like Michigan — where Democrat voters in last week’s primary lodged a protest vote by checking “uncommitted” on their ballot — a significant share of Minnesota’s population is Arab American....
...An NYT-Siena College poll found that a majority of his 2020 supporters thought he was too old to be an effective president now....
...There were 5,030 “uncommitted” votes in the Democratic primary early in the evening, as some Minnesota Democrats followed Michigan’s lead from last week and withheld their support from the president....
...In the party’s primary vote last month in Michigan, a swing state with a large Arab-American population, more than 100,000 Democrats voted “uncommitted” instead of for Biden....
...Liberal-minded Democrats cluster more consistently at the high-trust end when it comes to scientific expertise....
...In Michigan and Pennsylvania, two pivotal battleground states, Kennedy received the support of more than 15 per cent of registered voters, while Trump narrowly led Biden overall, in mid-March CNN polls....
...The latest FT-Michigan Ross survey found just 38 per cent of voters said they approved of Biden’s handling of the economy compared with 60 per cent who disapproved....
...Some polling has shown that Biden has been struggling to maintain the backing of younger voters, as well as non-college educated Black and Hispanic male votes....
...And looking at the US and UK, a surprising degree of consensus is now emerging. The most polarised environments – certain parts of certain US college campuses – are unrepresentative outliers....
...In the Michigan primary last week, 13 per cent of Democrats chose “uncommitted” on the ballot rather than Biden, many of them because of his stance on Israel’s war in Gaza....
...US: University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey Results: Pearson FY, Rightmove FY World events Finally, here is a rundown of other events and milestones this week....
...But in a worrying sign for Democrats, the NYT-Siena College survey found that a majority of Biden’s 2020 supporters now think he is too old to be an effective president at 81....
...The most recent FT-Michigan Ross poll showed 60 per cent of voters disapprove of how Biden is handling the economy, despite historically low unemployment, strong gross domestic product and wage growth, and...
...When Democrats want to frighten the children, they speak of the days of brokered conventions....
...“Every group — Democrats, Republicans and independents — list rising prices as by far the biggest economic threat . . . and the biggest source of financial stress,” said Erik Gordon, a professor at Michigan...
International Edition