Topics View All
Geography View All
Content Type View All
Trending:
Research Activities
General Information
Barack Obama has been re-elected president of the United States. The House remains majority Republican, while Democrats made gains in the Senate. Brookings experts have examined the issues, the process and implications of the results.
GRAPHIC
November 9, 2012, Thomas E. Mann, Korin Davis, Raffaela Wakeman and Elana Firsht
Past Event
November 7, 2012
Blog Post
comments
November 8, 2012, Martin S. Indyk
Refine by: U.S. Politics | U.S. Foreign Policy | Elections | foreign policy and the 2012 presidential election
Opinion | Yahoo! Finance
November 12, 2012, Bill Frenzel
Opinion | The Huffington Post
November 8, 2012, Daniel L. Byman
November 8, 2012, Suzanne Maloney
View in: عربي
Opinion | Huffington Post
November 8, 2012, William J. Antholis
November 8, 2012
November 8, 2012, Marvin Kalb | comments
November 8, 2012, Martin S. Indyk | comments
INFOGRAPHIC
Interview | Ouest France
November 7, 2012, Robert Kagan
View All Research on 2012 Presidential Election ›Show 10 More
William H. Frey
Senior Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program
"Nationally, even modest white support is no longer necessary for a Democratic victory if there is strong turnout for minorities."
Source: Bloomberg Businessweek
Thomas E. Mann
Senior Fellow, Governance Studies
The W. Averell Harriman Chair
William A. Galston
The Ezra K. Zilkha Chair in Governance Studies
Martin S. Indyk
Vice President and Director, Foreign Policy
@Martin_Indyk
Ron Haskins
Co-Director, Center on Children and Families, Budgeting for National Priorities
Senior Fellow, Economic Studies
Alice M. Rivlin
Benjamin Wittes
@benjaminwittes
Sarah A. Binder
@BinderSAB