According to new AP-NORC polling, only a third of Democrats feel optimistic about their party’s future—a dramatic collapse from just a year ago. What’s fueling this crisis of confidence, and is there a way out?
Author: Democratically
Kraft Heinz’s $3 billion investment promises efficiency, but will workers and communities see real benefits—or is this another case of corporations winning while everyday Americans shoulder the cost?
Capital One allegedly kept millions of depositors in the dark about high-yield savings accounts. Was it a bait-and-switch, or business as usual? New York’s AG says the fallout could be massive.
The White House’s G20 boycott over contested claims about South Africa’s land reforms sends shockwaves through international diplomacy, exposing the dangers of politicizing multilateral forums.
Uber’s new fixed-route rides and price lock subscriptions could reshape commuting for millions—but what’s the cost for workers, equity, and public transit?
Trump’s announcement of a record-breaking Boeing order from Qatar Airways dominated headlines, but the real value—and implications—of the deal are far more complex, touching ethics, economics, and America’s role in a changing world.
As US funding vanishes, the WHO is forced into austerity, gutting leadership and vital programs—leaving the world, not just the agency, in peril.
A sweeping investigation found millions of Kroger shoppers unknowingly overcharged on supposed sale items. Outdated tags and corporate understaffing lie at the root of a growing consumer outrage.
Irregular border crossings are down in the U.S. and EU, but the human toll and the structural drivers of migration remain unaddressed. Policy shifts grab headlines, yet behind every number is a larger story.
Nucor’s cyberattack exposed just how fragile American infrastructure can be in the digital age—and why political willpower, not deregulation, is what we need most.