Over the past week, msnbc.com has published “The State of America,” a series culminating in President Barack Obama’s 2015 State of the Union Address on Tuesday, Jan. 20. This is the state of the issues you care about, as told by organizations promoting social change and other policy experts.
The state of inequality in America · By Robert Reich, Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at Berkeley and former Secretary of Labor
The president has an opportunity in the State of the Union to tell the truth about the economy: Jobs are coming back, but wages aren’t. In December, the average wage actually dropped. The deeper truth is that this recovery, like the last five recoveries, masks the longer-term decline of most peoples’ wages – and the decline of the American middle class. Three decades ago, we took a giant U-turn.
The state of LGBT equality in America · By Adam Talbot, spokesperson for the Human Rights Campaign
Today, the state of the union for LGBT people is deeply imperfect, but progress is being made. LGBT people face big challenges, but at the root of all these challenges is a simple truth. LGBT people have the same hopes, dreams and aspirations as anyone else.
The state of the youth vote in America · By Ashley Spillane, President of Rock the Vote
Millennials often get a bad reputation, portrayed in the media as spoiled, lazy and entitled. The truth of the matter, though, is that we inherited some overwhelming problems from previous generations. We also inherited a bitingly partisan, polarized political system that seems to be stuck in gridlock more often than not.
The state of America’s wars · By Steven Simon, member of the National Security Council staff from 1994-1999 and 2011-12
The Middle East has not figured prominently in President Obama’s past State of the Union addresses. This year, however, it will warrant a bit more discussion, given that the preceding year saw two major U.S. initiatives: An intensive effort by Secretary of State John Kerry to negotiate a Palestinian-Israeli peace accord, which seemed to worsen U.S.-Israeli tensions while motivating Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to revert to the United Nations Security Council for diplomatic satisfaction and the International Criminal Court for legal retaliation; and a U.S.-led military campaign against Islamic State (ISIS) militants in both Iraq and Syria.
The state of low-wage America · By Arun Ivatury, campaign strategist with the National Employment Law Project
Perhaps the most important development for struggling American families over the past two years has been the emergence of stagnant wages as a major issue – redefining our political debate and spurring direct intervention to raise pay at the state and local level.
The state of the climate movement in America · By Jamie Henn, Strategy and Communications Director at 350.org
As we enter 2015, the state of the climate movement is strong. Over the last year, we have grown in leaps and bounds. Together, we turned out over 400,000 people into the streets of New York City during last September’s People’s Climate March. It was the largest demonstration for climate action in history – and the largest march on any issue for over a decade in New York.
The state of women and families in America · By Stephanie Schriock, President of EMILY’s List
We can make strides in the next two years for women – we must. Women across the country deserve policies that give them a fair shot at a better future, access to good jobs, and workplace policies that work for their lives. Congress and the president can help make that vision a reality.
The state of race and policing reform in America · By Alexis McGill Johnson, Executive Director of Perception Institute
The year 2014 brought us multiple tragic deaths of unarmed black men and a growing leaderless protest movement calling for police reform encapsulated by the hashtag: #BlackLivesMatter.
The state of immigration in America · By Simon Rosenberg, President of NDN/New Policy Institute
While the GOP’s latest rejection of immigration reform has dominated the headlines in recent weeks, the reality is that the United States is already undergoing a major societal shift as a result of significant Hispanic migration. And 2015 – regardless of Republican opposition – looks to be a tipping point.









