
City Voters Want Change, but Democrats Keep Winning. Why?
Proportional representation and multi-seat districts could finally give New York and other urban strongholds real political competition.
Related articles
More stories from Cities
- CultureMap Houstonflipped into CultureMap Houston
Totally sweet Houston suburb triumphs as No. 3 best place to live in U.S.
One Houston-area city took the top slot on a new list of "the 100 Best Places to Live in 2025." The list — from relocation marketing platform …
- Planetizenflipped into Urban Planning
Texas Bill Would Ban Road Diets, Congestion Pricing
A Texas state senator wants to prevent any discussion of congestion pricing and could suspend existing bike lane and sidewalk projects. A proposed …
- Gamintravelerflipped into The Travel Exchange
The Real Cost Of Living The Expat Dream In These 8 European Countries
Thinking about trading your current routine for café mornings, scenic strolls, and a dash of European flair? Living abroad can be a thrilling …
Join the flipboard community
Discover, collect, and share stories for all your interests
Sign upMore stories from U.S. Politics
- Associated Pressflipped into Business and Finance
China says there are no negotiations with the US over tariffs
BANGKOK (AP) — China on Thursday denied U.S. President Donald Trump’s assertion that the two sides were involved in active negotiations over tariffs, saying that any suggestion of progress in this matter was as groundless as “trying to catch the wind.” China’s comments come after Trump said Tuesday …
- The Washington Postflipped into Technology
Elon Musk had the government in his grasp. Then it unraveled.
The billionaire head of the U.S. DOGE Service clashed with Trump Cabinet officials well before he announced he would soon head back to Tesla. Elon Musk had tried to go over the head of a Cabinet secretary — again. The billionaire leader of the U.S. DOGE Service helped install Gary Shapley, a …
California economy now the world's fourth-largest, overtaking Japan
If California were its own country, its economy would now rank as the fourth-largest of any nation in the globe, Gov. Gavin Newsom said this week. Newsom announced the state’s new economic ranking Wednesday after recently released data from the International Monetary Fund and the U.S. Bureau of …