Our Latest
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Mar 29, 2019
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From the Magazine
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Spring 2019
2020 and the Democrats’ Theory of Change
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Spring 2019
Will Immigrants Find Themselves in the Driver’s Seat?
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Spring 2019
How to Rebuild the Labor Movement, State by State
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Winter 2019
States of Change
Must-Reads
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How Sears Was Gutted By Its Own CEO
Oct 17, 2018
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Fighting the Republicans’ Voter Purges in Ohio
Oct 10, 2018
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The First Family of Fraud
Oct 22, 2018
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Liberal Voters Finally Notice the War Over the Courts — Decades After Conservatives Did
Oct 25, 2018
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Brexit Panic as Brits Run Out of Toilet Paper
Oct 26, 2018
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What Taxing the Rich Could Yield
Nov 1, 2018
The Magazine
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Vol. 30 No. 2Spring 2019
Columns
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2020 and the Democrats’ Theory of Change
The Democrats can and must think big, but they have to frame their ideas around the realities of a coalition party that includes suburban moderates. -
A Groundbreaking New Enterprise: Buybax!
Want to make a killing in the stock market without actually creating anything of value? Try Buybax!
Notebook
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Getting Serious About Power
Can we learn something about the right’s strategic coherence without emulating either their ideas or their contempt for democracy? -
Richie Neal and Trump’s Taxes
The costs of having a corporate Democrat chair the House Ways and Means Committee -
Will Immigrants Find Themselves in the Driver’s Seat?
Trump’s ICE crackdown is increasing support for access to driver’s licenses. -
Could California End Childhood Poverty?
America’s most liberal state government has a far-reaching plan to do just that. But does it have the will to enact it?
Culture
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Is There Such a Thing as Progressive Nationalism?
In his most recent books, John Judis makes the case that there is—and that by indiscriminately embracing globalism, many liberals helped create nationalism’s virulent Trumpian version. -
The Courage to Defy Brutality
The case of a black Army veteran that spurred a South Carolina federal judge to defy his state's white supremacist power structure -
Prosecutors Against Mass Incarceration?
Reform is under way at the nerve center of the penal state, but it won’t be enough. -
The Crisis Last Time
The 2008 financial collapse should have brought the repudiation of neoliberalism. What happened? -
The Trouble with Tech
Once you understand the tech giants are capturing unguarded human experience, their business makes sense. -
The Unkept Promises of Higher Education
Colleges need to focus on their original mission—undergraduate teaching—for a new wave of low-income and minority students.
Features
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Trump and China: The Art of the Desperate Deal
Will Robert Lighthizerrestrain Donald Trump’s impulse to take a headline-grabbing and self-defeating China deal? -
Congress’s New Progressives Take On the Banks
The House Financial Services Committee—long a landing place for pro-bank Democrats—now includes AOC and a flock of leftists. And Maxine Waters is its new chair. -
Beto Versus The Barrio
The rock-star Democrat Beto O’Rourke, a candidate for president, once supported the bulldozing of a low-income neighborhood in his hometown of El Paso—a project spearheaded by his father-in-law. -
Needed: A U.S. Policy on Saudi Arabia
The next administration would do well to revise the long-standing U.S. partnership with Saudi Arabia, and America has substantial leverage to produce change in the kingdom’s behavior. -
The Migration Crisis and the Future of Europe
The identity crisis imperiling the continent isn’t one of race and religion. It’s one of Europe’s willingness to preserve and expand its liberal values. -
Not So Supreme?
Congress actually has a lot of mostly unused power to rein in the Roberts Court by clarifying the intent of the law. -
Do All Roads Lead to Congestion Pricing?
Portland, Oregon, and New York are taking different routes to charging drivers who need to get downtown during the rush hour. They’ll also have to think hard about the impacts on low-income residents. -
AMLO’s Gamble
Mexico’s decidedly leftist new president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, is taking on the business-political-criminal elite that has dominated his nation, and drenched it in bloodshed, for the past 40 years. -
How to Rebuild the Labor Movement, State by State
What progressives can learn from conservative anti-union advocacy
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