All the below tweets are in English.
引き続き以下貼っておきます。なお、弊社は日本の選挙を業務とすることは今後もありませんが、英語で政策を扱うため、標記については党派の偏りが表れているツイートも貼っています。アメリカでも、地域によって色が分かれることがあり、それが大学にもはっきり表れることがあります。
Note that we have not covered and will not cover elections in Japan but public policy in English language. Here we also pasted tweets which represent party lines, while there are Republican/Democrat areas in the U.S. and some universities which also show their areas’ colors.
"The other 2018 midterm wave." @IUBloomington students were part of this. #B1GVotes https://t.co/y8bYlkjl8M via @ConversationUS
— Policy Briefings IU (@PolicyBeatIU) November 8, 2018
"Anti-Semitism flourishes in … an unsettled climate, as do other kinds of racial, ethnic, and religious hostility," writes Alvin Rosenfeld of @IUBornsJSP in @haaretzcom https://t.co/neypkSncYP
— Policy Briefings IU (@PolicyBeatIU) November 5, 2018
Higher than expected economic growth should continue into 2019, according to an @IndianaUniv @KelleySchool forecast. https://t.co/cdbPFjxIOj via @IUNewsroom
— Policy Briefings IU (@PolicyBeatIU) November 1, 2018
"Free Trade, Economic Order Are at Risk." Lee Hamilton of @hamiltonlugar School and @SPEAIUB on foreign policy. https://t.co/l78TPviHSh
— Policy Briefings IU (@PolicyBeatIU) October 31, 2018
“If everybody voted, Clinton wins. If minority turnout was equal to white turnout, Clinton wins.” Research by @IUBloomington political scientist @blfraga featured in @UpshotNYT https://t.co/feRhshlchI
— Policy Briefings IU (@PolicyBeatIU) October 29, 2018
Gap in turnout between white and nonwhite voters is large and growing, new book by @IUBloomington political scientist @blfraga shows. https://t.co/iudNUbAnzs via @IUNewsroom
— Policy Briefings IU (@PolicyBeatIU) October 22, 2018
"Why don’t more Texas Latinos vote?" With comments by @IUBloomington political scientist @blfraga https://t.co/Ua6TDS6LCt
— Policy Briefings IU (@PolicyBeatIU) October 18, 2018
Can we improve presidential elections. Engage students in voting? Subject cyberspace to state sovereignty? Campus news roundup from @InsideIU Bloomington: https://t.co/K33oW5Dy1M
— Policy Briefings IU (@PolicyBeatIU) October 2, 2018
"I voted. Did you?" #B1GVotes challenge video with @IUHoosiers Lilly King, Justin Smith & Jacob Robinson. https://t.co/BJOepsZlei #IUVotes pic.twitter.com/OWPdFCvD4x
— Policy Briefings IU (@PolicyBeatIU) September 27, 2018
Hamilton & Lugar: We call on [Pres. Trump] to hold a series of bipartisan meetings with congressional foreign policy leaders to seek common ground… and a framework for civil debate going forward. We also call on Congress to do its part. via @thehill https://t.co/W3JD6mlPT1
— Hamilton Lugar School (@hamiltonlugar) October 6, 2018
#GoodNews: @IUBloomington has named @hamiltonlugar after former Indiana Sen. Richard Lugar & Rep. Lee Hamilton, highlighting their bipartisan work to improve life for Hoosiers and keep our country safe. https://t.co/wRJcrHqkl8
— Senator Joe Donnelly (@SenDonnelly) October 9, 2018
**Today** at 4pm (GA 1100): Our Fall '18 "Japan Politics & Society" series will continue with a public talk by @IUMediaSchool's Prof. Joe Coleman on the policy challenges presented by aging work forces in the US & Japan @hamiltonlugar pic.twitter.com/kW5DOU5paD
— 21st Century Japan Politics & Society Initiative (@21JPSI_IU) November 5, 2018
.@VentureBeat interviews @Castronova_E about his new game, The American Abyss, which he says is a preventive lesson. https://t.co/5atjas6hOV
— IU Media School (@IUMediaSchool) November 5, 2018
Election Day is one week from today. Media School students are doing their best to prepare the IU community. https://t.co/ujGG4eFryT
— IU Media School (@IUMediaSchool) October 30, 2018
Tune in to the 100th episode of the Through The Gates podcast to hear IU President Michael McRobbie talk about the future of American voting, Russian inference, and how we can protect our democratic process. Listen now: https://t.co/oKcy6tPcxK #TTG #podcast #election2018 #voting
— IU Provost (@IUBProvost) October 17, 2018
ICYMI: Prof. @lfr_ishere latest article with Prof. @ProfGuyCharles "Judicial Intervention As Judicial Restraint" can be found on @SSRN. The article is forthcoming in the @HarvLRev and argues SCOTUS should prevent partisan gerrymanders. Worth a read: https://t.co/KE3jSiAklX pic.twitter.com/RdENuukts4
— Austen Parrish (@AustenParrish) October 17, 2018
Prof. Charlie Geyh was a guest on the Bloomberg podcast, discussing "Sessions Blames Court Losses on ‘Judicial Activism’" https://t.co/Haf6MiW08s
— IUMaurerLaw (@IUMaurerLaw) October 23, 2018
Prof. @stevessanders on why he's one of 49 Indiana law professors who signed letter asking Senate not to confirm Brett Kavanaugh https://t.co/0hnTHpUykq via @indystar
— IUMaurerLaw (@IUMaurerLaw) October 5, 2018
What lessons have senators learned from Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill hearings? Prof. Charlie Geyh has answers: https://t.co/NfSzGftKu1
— IUMaurerLaw (@IUMaurerLaw) September 27, 2018
Election Day resources from your friends at @iulibraries https://t.co/NVC0aMSk77 pic.twitter.com/eXylgJxOa2
— The School of Public and Environmental Affairs (@SPEAIUB) November 6, 2018
They marched, but will they vote? @PaulHelmke weighs in on gun control advocates and #TurnoutTuesday at @JGfortwayne: https://t.co/P6k45KZRIW
— The School of Public and Environmental Affairs (@SPEAIUB) October 29, 2018
It's #ElectionDay! Polls in Indiana are open 6 a.m.-6 p.m.. Think your vote doesn't matter? Check out this video to understand why it does and why you should make the time to go cast a ballot. #Midterms2018 #MidtermElections2018 #EveryElectionMatters #EveryVoiceMatters pic.twitter.com/MIOuAddeRw
— SPEA at IUPUI (@SPEA_Indy) November 6, 2018
ICYMI: I voted on Tuesday when it was sunny and beautiful outside.
It’s cold and rainy today, but we work, play and go to school in the rain—you can VOTE on a rainy day too! Guaranteed to be warm and dry at polling sites!#JagsVote @IUPUI https://t.co/0s89rMFgQW https://t.co/5QIDu3Ml37
— Keith Anliker (@KeithAnliker) November 1, 2018
IUPUI is ranked the #13 college in the U.S. for student voting. So go do what Jags do best: VOTE! #ElectionDay2018 https://t.co/uvPgLlz3ep
— IUPUI (@IUPUI) November 6, 2018
https://twitter.com/IUPUI/status/1059600004619427840
Bangert: Can Democrat Tobi Beck beat GOP's Jim Baird in a deep-red, no-drama Indiana 4th? https://t.co/cy7HDIIg7E via @JCOnline
— Political Science (@purduepolsci) October 23, 2018
.@LoganRStrother co-authored the following article posted this morning in the @washingtonpost. The Supreme Court hasn’t followed public opinion for 50 years. Why would it start now? https://t.co/XrxvYOBJOH
— Political Science (@purduepolsci) October 17, 2018
Tippecanoe County election officials discuss protecting voters from fraud https://t.co/NuwywH70Z0 via @purdueexponent
— Political Science (@purduepolsci) November 2, 2018
Professor Mike Wolf talks new PFW Donnelly/Braun poll https://t.co/hOkZS4tEu8@wane15 @PurdueFWNews
— PurdueFW Arts & Sciences (@PurdueFWCOAS) October 25, 2018
The Mueller Investigation and the Prospect of Impeachment Discussion, Hosted by Concord Law School: https://t.co/SOcczLmsns via
— Concord Law School at Purdue University Global (@concordlaw) May 11, 2018
Congratulations @SVGarimella! Purdue’s Garimella gets U.S. presidential nod for National Science Board https://t.co/WI5QMFK348 via @YouTube
— Kimberley (@kelaine74) November 8, 2018
We must get this right!
Professor: Electronic voting offers easy target for today’s technology – News – Purdue University https://t.co/ZBqzEYDol3— Suresh Garimella (@SVGarimella) November 5, 2018
.@purduepolsci Professor, Jay McCann, sent his students to polling stations across the county for a class assignment. Their task was to collect voter data through an exit poll. #LiberalArtsWorks https://t.co/XkfDputYxg
— Purdue Liberal Arts (@PurdueLibArts) November 7, 2018
#RedbirdScholar @HartmanAndrew weighs in on the battles of culture wars in his book "A War for the Soul of America: A History of the Culture Wars" https://t.co/SnfjMnQtEz
— Research at ISU (@ISUResearch) November 1, 2018
Professor of labor and employment relations Michael LeRoy discusses the implications of President Trump’s bid to potentially end birthright citizenship in the U.S. in an interview with News Bureau business and law editor Phil Ciciora:https://t.co/2gXbrbzKwj pic.twitter.com/RGbhm6XBvI
— University of Illinois Law (@UIllinoisLaw) November 1, 2018
.@UChicagoPoliSci's Will Howell discusses the midterm elections, via @CNN https://t.co/rmgS1Cm9Kq pic.twitter.com/gOAvdzkP0F
— UChi Social Sciences (@UChicagoSSD) November 8, 2018
#ICYMI – New research from @UChicagoSoc's René Flores provides insight into racism in America, via @PacificStand https://t.co/g8Y9EDLBTe
— UChi Social Sciences (@UChicagoSSD) October 20, 2018
.@UChicagoPoliSci and @UChicagoCIR's John Mearsheimer discusses U.S. foreign policymaking, via @WBEZWorldview at the @ChicagoCouncil https://t.co/kBbinutMzq
— UChi Social Sciences (@UChicagoSSD) October 17, 2018
#ICYMI – @GenForward_UChi, led by @UChicagoPoliSci's Cathy Cohen, discusses what might drive young adults to the polls, via @monkeycageblog https://t.co/7tQOL6gG3W
— UChi Social Sciences (@UChicagoSSD) October 8, 2018
Who really came out on top of the midterm elections? What's next? Harris Professor @ProfWillHowell advises Americans to "settle in" until 2020 for a real impact. His full take, along with thoughts from other commentators, here: https://t.co/g7ZTMYS0xU via: @CNN
— Harris Public Policy (@HarrisPolicy) November 10, 2018
NEWS: The new #UChicago Harris Public Policy/@APNORC Poll finds #Democrats have grown increasingly concerned about election security in the last two years while #Republicans have grown more confident. #Election2018 https://t.co/F3AlOB3vic
— Harris Public Policy (@HarrisPolicy) October 10, 2018
Just read an awesome profile of @HarrisPolicy alum @TabithaK running for Congress in Alabama in the @nytimes. https://t.co/ylgKHSzxyA
— Paul Hoffman (@ph0ffman) October 18, 2018
I had a conversation on stage with @NikkiHaley last winter at @UChiPolitics. What was most interesting was how she navigated questions about @realDonaldTrump, supporting him on some things and demurring on others. Here it is:https://t.co/vFLo6YwIvn
— David Axelrod (@davidaxelrod) October 9, 2018
What impact might Justice Kavanaugh have on financial regulation? I asked @StevePearlstein, the Pulitzer Prize-winning business columnist for the @washingtonpost who correctly forecast the ‘08 financial crisis. New #AxeFiles! https://t.co/iAZmVi7Bae pic.twitter.com/5SxqxbYzES
— David Axelrod (@davidaxelrod) October 8, 2018
What was it like to be a career diplomat and Latin America expert, serving as @realDonaldTrump ambassador in, of all places, Mexico? My Wall-to-wall #AxeFiles convo with the brilliant and insightful Roberta Jacobson. https://t.co/BTZwA5L379 pic.twitter.com/rChSkVkzr7
— David Axelrod (@davidaxelrod) September 27, 2018
During my #AxeFiles podcast w/editors of @NYTimes and @washingtonpost, I asked @Postbaron about when his paper elects to use the word “lie.” https://t.co/IrMnqfLFNA
Today was one of those times:https://t.co/baYRCGy489— David Axelrod (@davidaxelrod) August 23, 2018
Professor Randall Kroszner anticipates the Fed will pursue policies as it sees fit for the economy, despite Trump's criticism of rising interest rates: https://t.co/XteVI6Sv8J
— Chicago Booth (@ChicagoBooth) November 1, 2018
Professor Amir Sufi finds that financial crises tend to radicalize electorates: https://t.co/F3LiqJCwB9
— Chicago Booth (@ChicagoBooth) October 28, 2018
Why do some say democracy has failed to slow rising inequality and nativism? https://t.co/FUAgFQ2zGK
— Chicago Booth (@ChicagoBooth) October 20, 2018
The lack of job growth in Republican counties hasn’t swayed support for the president. Research from professor Marianne Bertrand may help explain why: https://t.co/FnVIThWUmd
— Chicago Booth (@ChicagoBooth) October 19, 2018
Despite the way it seems sometimes, America’s cultural gap hasn’t widened, according to researchers: https://t.co/hF4srxZrd6
— Chicago Booth (@ChicagoBooth) October 18, 2018
A Booth study suggests that China’s credit allocation could tame its ambitions to overtake America: https://t.co/pmiUPtmnhS
— Chicago Booth (@ChicagoBooth) October 10, 2018
A panel of economists surveyed by Booth largely agreed that admitting more immigrants to the United States would benefit the economy: https://t.co/CBQZ5hbsZs
— Chicago Booth (@ChicagoBooth) October 9, 2018
As midterms approach, Booth research examines how political identity impacts voting. https://t.co/0QI8yj9sC6 @chicagoboothrev
— Chicago Booth (@ChicagoBooth) October 6, 2018
Profs. @tomginsburg and @aziz_huq explain why Democrats should restore minority party's oversight power: "If Democrats truly care about democracy and the rule of law, this is a chance to prove it, by sharing power once more." https://t.co/GFRGq9bQm8
— UChicago Law School (@UChicagoLaw) November 10, 2018
Prof. @aziz_huq on the flawed legal logic behind Trump’s birthright citizenship proposal https://t.co/78FhqBHKBT
— UChicago Law School (@UChicagoLaw) November 1, 2018
Prof. @stone_geoffrey joined @WGNRadio to discuss why not to surveil social media and Trump's statement about birthright citizenship (audio, 14 min) https://t.co/c6u1Ok2gqD
— UChicago Law School (@UChicagoLaw) November 1, 2018
Profs. @tomginsburg and @aziz_huq: “Courts are often on the front line of democratic erosion — but they are also key sites for its defense.” https://t.co/qrmlfgQk4z
— UChicago Law School (@UChicagoLaw) October 31, 2018
Then check out @SamaraKlar (@UofA Prof & @TGSatNU PhD) & @ykrupnikov (@PoliSciatNU -> @SBUPoliSci Prof) on how partisan disagreement makes political participation less desirable for independents in, "How to Win Swing Voters (and How to Lose Them)". https://t.co/t935pDCDwH
— Northwestern PoliSci (@PoliSciatNU) November 6, 2018
Trump's Success: economic anxiety or racial animus?
In a new @INETeconomics paper Thomas Ferguson, Benjamin Page, @Arturo_ChangQ, Jacob Rothschild, & Jie Chen leverage ANES open-ended data to show it's both & they can't be disaggregated via @theintercept https://t.co/xfPhmMwFuF pic.twitter.com/cZGcNq0j0d
— Northwestern PoliSci (@PoliSciatNU) November 1, 2018
Thomas Ferguson @UMassBoston, Benjamin Page @CSDDatNU, Jacob Rothschild @NorthwesternU, @Arturo_ChangQ and Jie Chen highlight that #EconomicCrises were the drivers of #Trump's win, not just social anxieties like #racism and #sexism, via @INETeconomics: https://t.co/3IgNpOHxbm pic.twitter.com/bdoi5CnhAi
— Palgrave Economics (@PalgraveEcon) November 6, 2018
The midterm elections were a referendum on President Trump, and “he very much helped make it that way … as he doubled down on his rhetoric and strategy,” IPR political scientist Laurel Harbridge-Yong told @wttw #ChicagoTonight https://t.co/9OkR1lr7c6
— Institute for Policy Research (@IPRatNU) November 8, 2018
IPR’s Celeste Watkins-Hayes weighs in on how race plays a role in the Georgia gubernatorial election. Read the full story here: https://t.co/tq7EveNzAV #ElectionDay pic.twitter.com/FdjZMlRbny
— Institute for Policy Research (@IPRatNU) November 6, 2018
IPR political scientist Laurel Harbridge-Yong on the Illinois 6th Congressional race: "Many suburban voters prefer conservative economic policies, but are turned off by Trump-esque rhetoric." #ElectionDay https://t.co/O1mesifmVk
— Institute for Policy Research (@IPRatNU) November 6, 2018
Politicians think American voters are more conservative than they really are, finds IPR postdoc @cskovron cited in @intelligencer #ElectionDayhttps://t.co/iH3lBZ6LUP
— Institute for Policy Research (@IPRatNU) November 6, 2018
With her endorsement, Oprah delivered 1 million votes to Barack Obama during the 2008 primary season, according to a 2012 study by IPR associate @C_Garthwaite cited in @washingtonpost #ElectionDay https://t.co/3xfR4tVOH5
— Institute for Policy Research (@IPRatNU) November 6, 2018
What does Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s decision to not seek re-election mean for Chicago? Political scientist and IPR associate @Tikayow and @PoliSciatNU’s @_JaimeDominguez discuss the mayor’s legacy. https://t.co/dXV1r2dVZI
— Institute for Policy Research (@IPRatNU) October 10, 2018
Faculty fellow @AlterKaren: "This election is going to be won by turnout." She also notes that President Trump is "trying to dial up the fear dial" in areas where he's perceived to be tough on immigration to impact turnout for the #2018midterms https://t.co/VCBXity72Q
— Buffett Institute for Global Studies (@BuffettInst) November 5, 2018
In June, former national security adviser, @CFR_org distinguished fellow Tom Donilon was on @davidaxelrod's "The Axe Files" to discuss why pulling out of the Iran deal was a mistake: https://t.co/BKypbBE88N He'll be here Friday to talk with @AnneliseRiles: https://t.co/9iZTX4Ouem
— Buffett Institute for Global Studies (@BuffettInst) October 23, 2018
Faculty fellow Jordan Gans-Morse (@JGM_NU) contributed an op-ed to the @chicagotribune on why "Donald Trump is an authoritarian too incompetent to destroy democracy." https://t.co/Ml4dKSJPUP
— Buffett Institute for Global Studies (@BuffettInst) September 20, 2018
On the 80th anniversary of #Kristallnacht, watch our @eshurd (affiliate of @PoliSciatNU & @BuffettInst ) discuss how US & European judges have failed #refugees seeking #asylum from religious persecution. https://t.co/HXAegfCH6N@womenalsoknow @WeinbergCollege @ResearchNU https://t.co/dzIZYVjyyd
— CSDD at Northwestern (@CSDDatNU) November 9, 2018
As you head in to cast your #2018midterms #vote, there are several factors at play on the ballot card that could sway your vote. Read up on these factors before voting. #VoteToday #B1GVotes #NUVotes https://t.co/m4x0DP5nHp
— Kellogg School (@KelloggSchool) November 6, 2018
On #ElectionEve, we’re revisiting research by Prof. @angelay33 to see what businesses can learn from political messaging and timing.
Here’s what she discovered: https://t.co/7tpE0cM2nS
— Kellogg School (@KelloggSchool) November 5, 2018
Just days before #2018midterms, President Trump announces his new plan to reduce Medicare drug prices. Prof. @C_Garthwaite weights in on this plan saying "This fits with the Trumpian worldview…this idea of us against the world." #KelloggHealthcare https://t.co/7L96oHWitF
— Kellogg School (@KelloggSchool) October 25, 2018
When the elite lie, they're more likely to do it to help themselves. Prof. Derek Rucker's research into why people lie gives us insight into Brett Kavanaugh's behavior. Read more, via @washingtonpost. https://t.co/S5107iVP40
— Kellogg School (@KelloggSchool) September 28, 2018
“The effect of a justice’s ideology on how he or she votes essentially doubles when the vote is pivotal,” according to Prof. Jörg Spenkuch. https://t.co/TmCo53L3U4 pic.twitter.com/99rm4wP8jO
— Kellogg School (@KelloggSchool) September 18, 2018
Regardless of nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s performance at the Supreme Court hearings, it’s unlikely we will have an understanding of his political ideologies anytime soon, explains Prof. Jorg Spenkuch, via @FortuneMagazine. https://t.co/CWaF3xK3CX
— Kellogg School (@KelloggSchool) September 13, 2018
Should we amend the First Amendment? That question was at the center of a recent debate between Professor Marty Redish and @StevenBrill, author of the recent bestseller Tailspin.https://t.co/j1ra0GwKKj
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) November 9, 2018
Congratulations to @SaraLove4MD (JD '93) who was elected to represent Maryland’s 16th district in its House of Delegates and to @EngelForArizona (JD '86) who won reelection in the Arizona State house. More about these inspiring alumnae at: https://t.co/9KHToWLbub
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) November 9, 2018
"If I had to choose, I’d rather that money be given to and spent by a PAC, where it’s more regulated, than to and by a nondisclosing group that is not much regulated,” says Prof Michael Kang.https://t.co/Ov0do7C9c9
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) November 9, 2018
Congrats to @JBPritzker (JD '93), who will be inaugurated in January as Illinois’ 43rd governor. https://t.co/6293Iu2ZSw
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) November 7, 2018
Gorsuch versus Kavanaugh: what is a conservative? asks Professor @TonjaJacobi at @scotus_oa.https://t.co/hEn14m5582
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) October 29, 2018
"Trump is trying to dial up the fear to distract to an area where he is being perceived as stronger, mainly his willingness to crack down on immigration, in hopes that that affects the turnout," says Professor Karen Alter.https://t.co/c3ZeuVAva9
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) October 26, 2018
Just in time for the November midterms, here's a crash course on #gerrymandering and #electionlaw with #PlanetLex's new host Vice Dean @jspeta and Professor Michael Kang.https://t.co/O7UD4tBXqp
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) October 18, 2018
Kavanaugh shows his colors and they are bright red, says Prof @TonjaJacobi at @scotus_oa. https://t.co/Gc0HZWXpSG
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) October 15, 2018
Prof @TonjaJacobi and @scotus_oa's qualitative and quantitative analysis leads them to predict a 5:3 ruling in favor of the government, with Sotomayor and Gorsuch joined by the silent Justice Thomas, based on his previous positions. https://t.co/PTHXJ3rd0S
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) October 8, 2018
Professor @TonjaJacobi talks #SCOTUS term limits with @CBSNews. https://t.co/NkEZNrgaFy
— Northwestern Law (@NorthwesternLaw) October 3, 2018
—
Policies:#Midterms2018,#MidtermElections2018 IN&ILhttps://t.co/eAYi7hMO8K
PolicyBeatIU IUBloomington hamiltonlugar IUMediaSchool IUMaurerLaw SPEAIUB IUPUI purduepolsci UChicagoSSD HarrisPolicy ChicagoBooth UChicagoLaw PoliSciatNU IPRatNU BuffettInst KelloggSchool NorthwesternLaw pic.twitter.com/ou6Ph57hJa— WS Atlantic/Pacific (@WSjp_insight) November 16, 2018