All posts tagged: Campaigns

Virginia redistricting campaigns have left voters confused : NPR

Virginia redistricting campaigns have left voters confused : NPR

The groups on either side of the redistricting vote in Virginia have used images of former President Barack Obama and Democratic Gov. Abigail Spanberger on their mailers. Jahd Khalil/VPM News hide caption toggle caption Jahd Khalil/VPM News When Randi Buerlein arrived to vote early in Virginia’s redistricting election, she said she didn’t like what she saw. “I’m looking at this booth, and it has a big picture of our governor saying, ‘Don’t be fooled,’” Buerlein said at her polling place in Hanover County, talking about Democratic Gov. Abigail Spanberger. “She’s on TV every day saying, ‘Vote yes.’ But they’re making it look like she’s saying, ‘Vote no.’” Virginia is in the midst of a contentious vote on whether to redraw the state’s congressional voting map, which would give Democrats an edge in all but one of the state’s 11 seats. The new map could result in Democrats gaining four seats in the U.S. House. Democrats won in a landslide in the 2025 gubernatorial election, but Virginia is still a fairly purple state, and Tuesday’s redistricting …

History of flotilla campaigns to end Israel’s siege of Gaza | Gaza News

History of flotilla campaigns to end Israel’s siege of Gaza | Gaza News

International activists are preparing on Sunday to set sail from northeastern Spain to the Gaza Strip in a massive 70-boat flotilla, aiming to break Israel’s devastating naval blockade and deliver much-needed humanitarian aid. Dubbed the “Global Resilience Flotilla,” the initiative is the second of its kind in less than a year. It boasts a significant increase in participation, with about 1,000 volunteers from 70 countries taking part in the effort. The vessels, departing from the port of Barcelona, are loaded with food, medicine, school bags, and stationery for Palestinian children. Organisers say the mission is being carried out in coordination with Palestinian civil society organisations, maritime security experts, and prominent international NGOs, including Greenpeace and Open Arms—a charity known for its Mediterranean rescue operations. The flotilla has also received increased backing from the Barcelona municipality. Pablo Castilla, a spokesperson for the flotilla, told reporters in Barcelona that the primary goal is to “condemn international complicity in the genocide committed by Israel in Gaza, demand accountability, and open a humanitarian corridor by sea and land”. Castilla …

Conservative 2024 campaigns reframed demographic shifts as an election integrity issue

Conservative 2024 campaigns reframed demographic shifts as an election integrity issue

During the 2024 United States presidential election, conservative figures successfully repackaged demographic fears into democratic alarms to broaden their mainstream appeal. By framing immigration as a purposeful strategy to manipulate elections, political campaigns normalized extremist narratives under the guise of protecting the voting process. These observations were published in a recent study in the journal PS: Political Science & Politics. Researchers have tracked a narrative known as the Great Replacement within conservative media ecosystems for years. The phrase gained modern popularity from a 2011 book by French literary theorist Renaud Camus. However, the core anxieties fueling this theory possess a long history in American electoral politics. Historic examples noted by researchers include late nineteenth century panics over a perceived Chinese invasion. Similarly, politicians in the early twentieth century fomented fear regarding a sudden flood of Southern European immigrants. The modern replacement narrative relies on four central assumptions. It suggests that a nation is experiencing immense population changes, and that these shifts are not occurring by accident. Instead, the theory claims these changes reflect a conscious …

WME Comes Out in Support of Blake Lively Over “Takedown Campaigns”

WME Comes Out in Support of Blake Lively Over “Takedown Campaigns”

WME, Blake Lively‘s agency that dropped Justin Baldoni hours after she accused him of sexual harassment, is going public on the It Ends With Us legal battle, throwing its weight behind the actress ahead of a trial set to start next month. “In an industry that too often asks women to absorb the damage and stay quiet, Blake Lively chose to stand up for herself, her castmates, and those without the ability to fight back,” the agency said in a statement on Friday. “She has met this moment with courage, moral clarity, and extraordinary determination.” The announcement of support marks a notable turn in a high-profile clash that’s forced some in Hollywood to take sides. The trial will pit conflicting narratives advanced by Lively and Baldoni against each other, with little wiggle room in between. One tells a story of an A-list actress, aided by some of the biggest celebrities in the world who include husband Ryan Reynolds and friend Taylor Swift, plotting to seize control of a director’s passion project. The other is a …

Contributor: Investigate the AI campaigns flooding public agencies with fake comments

Contributor: Investigate the AI campaigns flooding public agencies with fake comments

California built its tradition of open government — including for citizen boards that set the rules for such functions as automotive repair and security guard licensing — precisely to keep well-funded corporate interests in check. Lobbyists and special interests are constantly scheming to defeat the will of the majority. Now they are able to do more damage using artificial intelligence to simulate fake grassroots opposition to clean air measures, and they are surreptitiously using the identities of real people to deceive regulators. Last June, the South Coast Air Quality Management District received more than 20,000 comments opposing a pair of clean air rules that would have prevented 2,500 premature deaths and 10,000 new cases of asthma. A February investigation by the Los Angeles Times revealed that those comments were submitted through CiviClick, a Washington-based AI-powered comment generation platform, orchestrated by a local political consultant with ties to the natural gas industry. When the district’s cybersecurity team reached out to a small sample of commenters to verify their identities, a majority of respondents said that they …

Oscars Postmortem: The Best and Worst 2026 Awards Campaigns

Oscars Postmortem: The Best and Worst 2026 Awards Campaigns

The dust has settled on the 2026 Oscar season, and the winners (One Battle After Another and Sinners, mostly) have been crowned. But before we close this chapter of Oscar history, Little Gold Men is taking stock of how everything went and handing out a few superlatives. We take a closer look at the year’s various months-long Oscar campaigns, breaking down which ones worked and which ones didn’t. Sinners director Ryan Coogler was a particular standout. As a filmmaker, he’s mostly shied away from press and the spotlight in the past—but this year, he really put himself out there in a way that still rang true to his own sensibilities, such as the viral video of him explaining different types of film stock. Coogler came away a winner, nabbing the award for best original screenplay—but you didn’t have to actually win an Oscar to come out on top this season. Jacob Elordi ran a flawless campaign for his role in Frankenstein, landing his first Oscar nomination (for supporting actor) and, perhaps more importantly, shifting his …

AI-generated ads are trickling into political campaigns, sparking big worries

AI-generated ads are trickling into political campaigns, sparking big worries

At least 15 campaign ads featuring AI-generated content have run since November, stoking concerns that the now-ubiquitous technology could cause confusion or even mislead voters ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. In state, local and federal elections across the country, AI has been everywhere from school board campaigns to governor’s races, used to enhance speech, turn politicians into cartoons or, in one notable case in Massachusetts, mimic a rival politician’s voice. In the state’s gubernatorial race, the campaign of Republican primary candidate Brian Shortsleeve created an AI-generated radio ad that sounds like Democratic Gov. Maura Healey, using Healey’s “voice” to say things she never actually said, including about the state’s economy. The clip does not contain an explicit AI disclaimer, and instead the caption says it’s what her radio ads would sound like “if she was honest.” Shortsleeve’s campaign has also released AI-generated videos depicting Healey as the Grinch and another of her hissing with red eyes, neither of which contained explicit AI disclaimers. Patrick Nelson, Shortsleeve’s communications director, said the campaign uses AI to …

How the death of a far-right activist has shaken up the French left’s mayoral campaigns

How the death of a far-right activist has shaken up the French left’s mayoral campaigns

Rabya Boinaheri, LFI candidate for mayor of the 15th and 16th arrondissements of Marseille, February 20, 2026. THEO GIACOMETTI FOR LE MONDE No municipal campaign debate goes by without mention of the death of far-right activist Quentin Deranque, who was beaten to death by antifascist activists on February 14 in Lyon. The debate held in Lyon itself on February 24 saw heated exchanges between the four participants. The same dynamic played out in Marseille during the first – and perhaps only – televised debate bringing together the four main candidates for mayor on Thursday, February 19. “The half-hour on Quentin wasn’t even on the agenda… We wanted to talk about Marseille, but they took us for fools,” said the left-wing incumbent mayor, Benoît Payan, after the broadcast. Radical-left candidate Sébastien Delogu, whose party La France Insoumise (LFI) has ties with a group accused of taking part in the beating, tried to defuse the controversy from the outset by paying his respects to Deranque, while also recalling that, in 1995 in Marseille, a young man named …

What the New Deal Can Teach Today’s Public Power Campaigns | Sandeep Vaheesan

What the New Deal Can Teach Today’s Public Power Campaigns | Sandeep Vaheesan

In the United States today, officials at all levels of government generally act as if private enterprise is the only way to provide goods and services. Yet a bastion of public ownership survives: more than a quarter of electricity customers—including the residents of Los Angeles, Omaha, San Antonio, Seattle, Jacksonville, and Tupelo, along with tens of millions of other people—get their power from one of the country’s more than 2,500 publicly owned utilities and rural electric cooperatives. Mostly established in the first half of the twentieth century, these institutions have a long record of offering reliable service at affordable rates; even today, publicly owned utilities charge less and resolve outages faster on average than their investor-owned counterparts. Creating more like them, however, has been extraordinarily difficult. Since the 1940s, few communities have successfully taken control of their private utilities; one such example is the city of Massena, New York, which waged a seven-year political and legal fight before taking over its power grid from Niagara Mohawk in 1981. Residents immediately saw their bills go down …