Five Essential Texts on Democracy
We asked a leading political theorist for help understanding the meaning of democracy and the elite reaction to it.
Abigail Torre grew up in Chile and now lives in Berkeley, California where she is cochair of the East Bay chapter of Democratic Socialists of America.
We asked a leading political theorist for help understanding the meaning of democracy and the elite reaction to it.
Act now, before it’s too late to save America.
Mark E. Smith of the Fall was one of the late 20th century’s great working-class musicians, but his music suffered from his overwhelming resentment of his middle-class audience.
Every year, it gets harder to vote. We have our elected officials to thank for that.
The screwball comedy The Devil and Miss Jones exemplifies how pro-worker Hollywood was just on the eve of McCarthyism.
Crunching the numbers on the class war.
A guide to election polling terms.
America’s favorite television arcs toward autocracy.
Union revenues and assets are on the rise — union membership is not.
When and where organized labor’s been on the move.
From the Moonies to military revanchists, Abe Shinzo was in bed with some dangerous oddballs. His funeral was a battle over their place in Japanese politics.
In between smiling, waving, and running up a $400 million annual bill, the late Queen Elizabeth II was the face of some pretty bad stuff during her seven-decade reign.
Legislation and case law targeting leftists is something like an American tradition.
If you have anything nice to say, slide into our DMs.
If you can’t carry a tune, you can’t take the White House. Here are some of the more memorable campaign songs in American history.
The process for constitutional amendment is an uphill battle. Since 1789, almost 12,000 amendments have been proposed — but only 27 have passed. It’s been 50 years since one has made its way to the states for ratification.
Dispatches from Jeff Bezos’s Washington Post.