MSNBC reporters traveled far and wide over the past year, hitting the campaign trail and shining a light on poverty-stricken pockets of the country. Here are 10 must-read stories we published in 2015.
Geography of Poverty: A journey through forgotten Americaby Trymaine Lee
The most vulnerable Americans are being crushed by the grip of poverty, from the deserts of the Southwest through the black belt in the South, to the post-industrial, rusting factory towns that dot the Midwest and Northeast.
Shuttered: The end of abortion access in red Americaby Irin Carmon
Roe v. Wade — the 1973 Supreme Court opinion legalizing abortion — started in Texas. Now, as abortion rights are under unprecedented attack, it’s Texas that could trigger the end of Roe v. Wade. At stake: The reproductive rights of millions of American women, across the entire country.
Our old familiar globe is goneby Tony Dokoupil
It’s melted and dried, burned and drowned, storm-wracked in ways never experienced before. The past three decades have been the hottest on record and 2015 is expected to set a scorching new high. As a species, we are already moving and adapting, adjusting our definition of hospitable land.
In 2016 race, drug courts get second lookby Aliyah Frumin
Judge Jo Ann Ferdinand looked past the lawyers and spoke directly to the criminal offenders before her. “You should feel proud of yourself,” she said to one. “I know this hasn’t been easy for you,” she consoled another. The judge asked personal questions, like where one offender learned his cooking skills. Several times, the courtroom broke into applause when Ferdinand presented someone with a certificate, bracelet, and handshake. It wasn’t your typical day in court.
The failed experiment of immigrant family detentionby Amanda Sakuma
The steady hum of construction was a near-constant backdrop here for months, as the federal government rushed to build higher cement walls to confine immigrant mothers and their children. Now those sounds are being silenced as the cracks appear in an immigrant detention policy that may soon soon give way.
Forget 2016: Democrats already have a plan for 2020by Benjy Sarlin
As President Obama’s second term winds down and Hillary Clinton’s likely presidential campaign winds up, it feels like the 2016 election is drawing even more attention than the upcoming midterm races. But there’s another election increasingly on the minds of Democratic lawmakers, party operatives, big money donors, and progressive activists: 2020. That’s the year voters will elect state lawmakers who will redraw congressional and state legislative districts all over the country.









