The Leading Princeton Publication of Conservative Thought

2010-2011 Issues

A Closer Look at Northeast Senate Races: Part 2

/October 30, 2010

By Sam Norton, Tory New Hampshire In the spring of 2009, three-term Senator Judd Gregg announced that he would be retiring, setting off a marquee race in this perennial battleground. New Hampshire, the only state in the Northeast to back George W. Bush in 2000, had swung to the left in the past decade, narrowly […]

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A Closer Look at Northeast Senate Races: Part 1

/October 30, 2010

By Brennan Robbins, PPN Delaware Special Election Senate Race The special election to fill Vice-President Joe Biden’s former Senate seat seems to have its own unique, internal logic: whatever is expected to happen will not happen. At the outset of the race, political observers expected Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden (D) to succeed his father’s […]

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Point-Counterpoint: California’s Proposition 19

/October 21, 2010

In Support of Prop 19 By Natalie Sanchez, PPN California voters face a number of decisions in the upcoming general election. Of special interest nationwide is Proposition 19, which, according to the California Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO), would allow individuals age 21 or older to possess and cultivate limited amounts of marijuana for personal use. […]

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Commentary: The Ideological Origins of the Tea Party

/October 21, 2010

By James Di Palma-Grisi, Tory Since the Tea Party’s inception, it has been unclear whether the movement is a genuine mass protest or a staged machination by the traditional political establishment. While only 5% voted for Obama in 2008, and while their funding sources are traditional Republican strongholds (like Americans for Prosperity), 20% of the […]

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A Snapshot of Contested Political Races in the Midwest.

/October 21, 2010

By Branden Lewiston, Tory The quirky yet quintessentially American region that brought us Jesse Ventura, Al Franken, and Rod Blagojevich promises to deliver many new electoral surprises this mid-term cycle. The common theme is that the national anti-establishment tide spells trouble for many incumbent Democrats in the region, but the politics of local personalities still […]

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Southern Political Roundup

/October 21, 2010

By Jeff Schwartz, Tory In a year most analysts predict that control of the House of Representative and even the Senate has fallen within reach of the Republican Party, the South is no exception. In a region generally distrustful of increased government economic interference and ‘big government’, the legislative agenda of President Barack Obama, Speaker […]

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NE Roundup-Governor Elections

/October 21, 2010

By Brennan Robbins, PPN Massachusetts Governor Race: In Massachusetts, Democratic Governor Deval Patrick faces a difficult challenge from Charlie Baker, a former CEO of Harvard Pilgrim Healthcare with moderate credentials. Baker is competing for the anti-Patrick vote with an independent candidate, Massachusetts Treasurer Timothy P. Cahill. Formerly a Democrat, Cahill became a Fox News fixture […]

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South Races

/October 21, 2010

By Lamar Robinson, PPN Alabama In Alabama there is a Senate race that exactly no one thinks is competitive. Republican incumbent Richard Shelby is expected to cruise to reelection against Democrat attorney William Barnes. Shelby has been in the Senate since 1987. Alabama also has a governor’s race to settle this year. The GOP incumbent […]

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Illinois Senate Race

/October 21, 2010

By Lisa Femia, PPN On Sunday October 10th, Illinois Senate candidates State Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias (D) and U.S. Representative Mark Kirk (R) met for their first debate on “Meet the Press.”  The focus of the debate?  Not policy issues, as one would expect, but rather issues of personal integrity.  The race for the seat formerly […]

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Harry Reid and Sharron Angle

/October 21, 2010

By Shane Mitchell, PPN The campaign for Nevada’s seat in the Senate is one of the most hotly contested races this election season. Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat, is opposed by Sharron Angle, a Tea Party Republican. Both parties are throwing their full weight behind this election, and—regardless of the result—the victorious party will […]

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Publisher’s Letter: The “C-Word”

/October 9, 2010

Greetings, Class of 2014, Congratulations and welcome to Princeton University! More importantly, welcome to a serious institution of higher learning bereft of that immature, adolescent notion of socio-academic stratification—well, not entirely. On any given day, you are more likely than not to hear the name of one or more of the following mutually inclusive student […]

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Censored: The Politics Behind Silencing Nonie Darwish

/October 9, 2010

by Aaron Smargon ’11 Last month’s cancellation of Nonie Darwish’s November 18th talk, “Sharia Law and Perspectives on Israel,” brought to light how controversial a figure she is. The attention given to Darwish’s statements, however, has obscured some unpleasant truths about how student organizations operate on campus. The clubs in question—Tigers for Israel (TFI), the […]

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