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America's aging voting machines managed to survive another election

  • Written by Lawrence Norden, Deputy Director, Democracy Program, Brennan Center for Justice, New York University
imageDepending on old technology.Rob Pegoraro/Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA

During this year’s voting, the vast majority of states used outdated voting machines perilously close to the end of their projected lifespan. Back in April, we warned that 42 states use machines that are at least a decade old. Given that a high percentage of these machines have...

Read more: America's aging voting machines managed to survive another election

What President Trump means for the future of energy and climate

  • Written by Mark Barteau, Director, University of Michigan Energy Institute, University of Michigan

President…Donald…Trump. For those on both sides of the aisle who vowed “Never Trump!,” that’s going to take some getting used to. On this morning after a stunning election, the first impulse may be to describe the future in apocalyptic phrases. Game over for the climate! Game over for NATO! Game over for the Clean...

Read more: What President Trump means for the future of energy and climate

What Donald Trump's surprise victory means for the economy and business

  • Written by Christos Makridis, Ph.D. Candidate in Labor and Public Economics, Stanford University

Editor’s note: Donald Trump stunned the polls and the pundits to win the 2016 U.S. presidential election. So what will his victory mean for the economy, businesses and financial markets? We asked four of our regular economic writers to weigh in.

Healing the divide

Christos Makridis, Stanford University

In the past few months, economic policy...

Read more: What Donald Trump's surprise victory means for the economy and business

Marijuana legalization: Big changes across country

  • Written by Sam Méndez, Executive Director, Cannabis Law & Policy Project, University of Washington

This year’s election season was historic in more ways than one. An unprecedented nine states considered liberalizing cannabis laws, and here’s how it broke down: California, Massachusetts and Nevada saw their ballot measures pass. If Maine’s ballot measure is also approved, that would bring the total number of states with legal...

Read more: Marijuana legalization: Big changes across country

In victory speech, Donald Trump discovers the power of 'we'

  • Written by Christian Lundberg, Associate Professor of Rhetoric, Communication Consultant, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill

The core theme of Donald Trump’s campaign – that the establishment was broken – drove waves of his supporters to the polls.

Surprisingly, this theme didn’t make it into his victory speech. Nor did any reference to the seismic shift in American politics that took place, save for brief mentions that the night was...

Read more: In victory speech, Donald Trump discovers the power of 'we'

This election was not hacked – but it was attacked

  • Written by Richard Forno, Senior Lecturer, Cybersecurity & Internet Researcher, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageAll indications are that voting was not subject to a cyberattack.Ballot box via shutterstock.com

The presidential campaign of 2016 thankfully – and we can only hope officially – ended this evening. As of when this article was posted, there are no reports of widespread cyberattacks or other digital interference against state voting...

Read more: This election was not hacked – but it was attacked

Are wealthy donors influencing the public school agenda?

  • Written by Rebecca Jacobsen, Associate Professor of Teacher Education, Michigan State University
imageA campaign for Los Angeles Unified School District school board candidates. SEIU Local 99 | Education Workers United Follow, CC BY-NC

School boards have often been portrayed as old-fashioned and dysfunctional, so much so that some school reform leaders have advocated for eliminating school boards altogether.

It is no surprise then that school board...

Read more: Are wealthy donors influencing the public school agenda?

Democrats failed to gain a Senate majority, too

  • Written by Jennifer Victor, Associate Professor of Political Science, George Mason University

While the world was focused on Clinton versus Trump, the balance of power in the Senate was decided. While not all the races are decided at this hour, it is clear that the Republicans will maintain a majority of the U.S. Senate.

The Democrats needed to swing five seats in their favor in order to take the majority of seats (or pick up four seats,...

Read more: Democrats failed to gain a Senate majority, too

Five things that explain Donald Trump’s stunning presidential election victory

  • Written by Anthony J. Gaughan, Professor of Law, Drake University

A populist wave that began with Brexit in June reached the United States in stunning fashion on Tuesday night. In one of the biggest upsets in American political history, Donald Trump won a truly historic victory in the U.S. presidential election.

Trump’s remarkably decisive win stunned most political pundits, myself included. Throughout...

Read more: Five things that explain Donald Trump’s stunning presidential election victory

What we can learn from market's reaction to a President Trump

  • Written by Ray Sturm, Associate Lecturer of Finance, University of Central Florida

Global financial markets plunged as Donald Trump appeared headed toward victory in the U.S. presidential election.

Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 and FTSE 100 tumbled about 5 percent, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 2.9 percent and the Mexican peso – a key indicator of investor sentiment during this race – plummeted 12...

Read more: What we can learn from market's reaction to a President Trump

More Articles ...

  1. How Twitter bots affected the US presidential campaign
  2. Supermoons are big and bright, but not as rare as the hype would suggest
  3. Why the court 'victory' for Malheur militants was anything but
  4. Inside Aleppo's medical nightmare, and why we must act
  5. The fear election
  6. 'Spearphishing' roiled the presidential campaign – here's how to protect yourself
  7. What Theresa May could teach America’s next president about leading a divided country
  8. A president in a pantsuit?
  9. Q A with Yale scholar: How the FBI has meddled in politics before
  10. Voters in Texas, North Carolina, Ohio and Florida are changing the swing state map
  11. Libertarian economics: A philosophical critique
  12. Civility at the core of American democracy, whatever politicians say
  13. Climate change could be a unifying cause of millennials, but will they vote?
  14. In Trump, extremism found its champion – and maybe its demise
  15. Violence has long been a feature of American elections
  16. How to deal with election anger? Try a little tenderness
  17. What can the mass 'check-in' at Standing Rock tell us about online advocacy?
  18. Understanding the genes that make our circadian clocks tick
  19. How Trump's 'Mormon problem' could mean he loses Utah to Evan McMullin
  20. Masculine culture responsible for keeping women out of computer science, engineering
  21. What HBO's Westworld gets wrong (and right) about human nature
  22. Partisan attacks on Clinton Foundation obscure real issues with how it's run
  23. Could Colorado's proposed health care plan be a model for the rest of us?
  24. History points to more dangerous Malheur-style standoffs
  25. Why voters don't seem to forgive Clinton, while Trump gets a free pass
  26. Should oil companies like Exxon be forced to disclose climate change risks?
  27. When 'energy' drinks actually contained radioactive energy
  28. Global climate talks move to Marrakesh: Here's what they need to achieve
  29. Dylann Roof, Michael Slager on trial: Five essential reads on Charleston
  30. Here's why daylight saving time isn't worth the trouble it causes
  31. Maine ballot initiative would let voters rank candidates
  32. Why understanding Native American religion is important for resolving the Dakota Access Pipeline crisis
  33. The Conversation is hiring an education editor
  34. The Conversation is hiring a non-profit and philanthropy editor
  35. Counting 11 million undocumented immigrants is easier than you think
  36. Science deconstructs humor: What makes some things funny?
  37. A 'rigged' vote? Four US presidential elections with contested results
  38. Urban nation: What's at stake for cities in the 2016 elections
  39. How hard is it to rig an election?
  40. Californians backing cigarette tax boost, even though Big Tobacco spending millions
  41. Restoring transparency and fairness to the FBI investigation of Clinton emails
  42. Why the Supreme Court matters for workers
  43. The myth of the disappearing book
  44. How US policy in Honduras set the stage for today's mass migration
  45. Why you shouldn't blame lying on the brain
  46. The ocean is losing its breath – and climate change is making it worse
  47. How to ensure smart cities benefit everyone
  48. Why the current plan to save the endangered vaquita porpoise won't work
  49. What do cheerleader uniforms and smartphones have in common?
  50. Why America urgently needs to improve K-12 civic education