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Dear Mr. President:

Testimony and Public Comment
Heather C. McGhee
On a late evening this past summer and without warning, one of the oldest buildings in Atlanta caught fire. Gaines Hall — a former dormitory on the campus of Morris Brown College — had been shuttered for years, closed when the school fell on hard times. After firefighters extinguished the two-alarm
In the media
Parents and students enter into an often complicated and opaque process when trying to secure financial aid, making some kind of financial discussion essentially a requirement for anyone hoping to successfully pay for college, said Mark Huelsman, a senior policy analyst at Demos, a left-leaning
In the media
Jillian Berman
Clinton supports raising the federal minimum wage to $12 per hour. Despite minimum wage hikes by many state and local governments, and by high-profile employers like Walmart and Target, the federal minimum wage remains stuck at $7.25 per hour, the same rate it has been at since 2009. Many advocates
In the media
Beth Braverman
How has the rise of big donors affected our policies? In a recent post, political scientist Seth Masket, whose work I deeply respect and have read for years, argues that “what's not happening here is the superdonors skewing American politics rightward.” His argument is that so far in the 2016
Blog
Sean McElwee
“The financial crisis and the Great Recession and its aftermath are hopefully the most significant economic calamity that this generation will experience,” said labor economist and policy analyst Catherine Ruetschlin, a visiting professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City [and Demos fellow].
In the media
Lisa Gutierrez
Representative Paul Ryan, the increasingly-likely newest Speaker of the House, has a couple of stipulations before he accepts the job.
Blog
Tamara Draut
Critics — and even some supporters — of the program say its designations are arbitrary, and raise questions about whether the benefit should be rethought, expanded, or even eliminated. Adding farming to the list could introduce further complexity, since farmers in the U.S. work mainly for for-profit
In the media
Jillian Berman
In a speech at the Rose Garden today, Vice President Joe Biden announced that he would not be running for president.
Blog
Tamara Draut
"I cannot and will not give up my family time," Ryan told reporters following the House GOP meeting. That statement set off a firestorm of criticism, from the left and right. As the heir-apparent to Speaker Boehner, Paul Ryan made his need for work-life balance clear. As the father of three children
Blog
Joseph Hines