Letter from Glasgow

Labour renewed in a Britain unchanged

But then in late April, the blossom trees awaken in the resurgent sun, their brilliant petals a thrilling antidote to the months of grey. Within days of their fading arrives the full vibrancy of the parks and countryside around Glasgow, a reminder that the trade-off for living somewhere so apparently ...
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Letter from Glasgow

Bolsonaro’s Regime of Chaos and Fear

The pandemic and the collapse of democracy in Brazil

In the third week of April, when asked about the rising death toll, Jair Bolsonaro answered that he didn’t know: “I’m not a gravedigger,” the president of Brazil snapped. When it was called to his attention the following week that the number of Covid-19 deaths in Brazil had exceeded the ...
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Bolsonaro’s Regime of Chaos and Fear

Nevertheless, She Persisted

Exiles on 12th Street, Episode Eight

This is the eighth episode of Public Seminar’s podcast, Exiles on 12th Street. If you like it, go to iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts and subscribe. Thanks to the bravery of several generations of activist women, the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified on August 18, 1920, finally granting women in the ...
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Sustaining Democratic Opposition to Trumpism

Why the Democratic Party Must Support Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

Since Super Tuesday, it has been clear that the Democratic nominee will be Joe Biden. And in the past week, there has been an extraordinary public display of political unity behind the Biden campaign, with Bernie Sanders, Barack Obama, and then Elizabeth Warren issuing full-throated endorsements. The appeal to party unity in the face ...
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Sustaining Democratic Opposition to Trumpism

Over Our Dead Bodies

Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Hamilton” and the lessons of contemporary history

Perhaps it is inevitable that middlebrow culture seems particularly meaningful at moments of disarray. When Donald Trump won the presidential election in November 2016, the hottest cultural phenomenon was Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Hamilton: An American Musical, and each song — ostensibly about the American Revolution and its aftermath — seemed to ...
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Over Our Dead Bodies

Unlimited Power for an Indefinite Period

Coronavirus becomes an opportunity for Viktor Orbán to extend his power

On March 30, 2020, the Hungarian Parliament passed the so-called “Enabling Act”. In the future, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán will, therefore, be able to govern by decree without parliamentary approval. The law does not have a time limit. The Hungarian government claims that the massive spread of the novel coronavirus is the ...
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Unlimited Power for an Indefinite Period

Populists Love the Pandemic

Populist rulers are exploiting this crisis to the fullest

WARSAW – Threats to national security invariably limit domestic political disputes. Now that governments have assumed a leading role in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic, the political opposition in countries under populist rule is quickly being marginalized. In theory, the authorities in these countries could use the crisis to invoke a ...
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Populists Love the Pandemic

In Praise of Bureaucracy

How our patrimonial presidency endangers us all

But we’ve mostly disregarded one danger and it’s the one I believe is the most significant: Trump’s attack on the administrative state.  The novel coronavirus bug revealed the American state, so impressive on the global stage with its ability to project unparalleled military force anywhere in the world, as shockingly unable ...
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In Praise of Bureaucracy

Gray is Beautiful, Part 3

How do we balance the agendas of progressive and moderate voters?

What is to be done, in the face of the present crisis of democracy in America -- and far beyond -- in the midst of a pandemic? I think that we have a clear goal: all democrats -- small “d” -- have to work together against Trump and Trumpism. I agree ...
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Gray is Beautiful, Part 3

Over 900 U.S. Political Scientists are Worried about Democratic Elections in November

Here’s Why

In the spirit of reflexive inquiry, we offer the following hypotheses: The current COVID pandemic is a global health crisis and an economic crisis of unprecedented proportions, and such crises always place stress on democracy. Political scientists understand that such crises can place extraordinary strain on even the most functional and legitimate ...
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Over 900 U.S. Political Scientists are Worried about Democratic Elections in November

Gray is Beautiful, Part 2

On the Social Condition and Fractured Society in Donald Trump’s America

Gray Beauty I came to appreciate the beauty of the gray listening to a lecture by Adam Michnik at The New School for Social Research in 1996. In his lecture, likewise entitled “Gray is Beautiful,” Michnik declared: “Radical movements -- whether under black or red banners -- gladly use democracy in order ...
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Gray is Beautiful, Part 2