
The Ends of Lava Jato
Brazil’s massive corruption scandals have turned the country’s politics into a spectator sport.
Jonathan Sas has worked in senior policy and political roles in government, think tanks, and the labor movement. He is an honorary witness to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. His writing has appeared in the Toronto Star, National Post, the Tyee, and Maisonneuve.
Brazil’s massive corruption scandals have turned the country’s politics into a spectator sport.
Jean-Luc Mélenchon isn’t seeking leadership of a marginalized left. He’s aiming to transform the whole of French politics.
United Airlines’ forcible removal of a passenger exposed the everyday violence that keeps capitalism running.
The people who have insisted on the profound moral need to save struggling children have been remarkably silent about the decades of failure in charter schools.
Andrew Jackson was a murderous racist who used democratic rhetoric to enhance his own power. We should scorn his legacy.
Mélenchon’s election campaign has galvanized the Left by doing what Hamon couldn’t — making a clean break with the political center.
Pink Tide governments delivered much-needed reforms. But they also defanged the movements that brought them to power.
As the privatization of public education continues, students with disabilities suffer. Under Trump and Betsy DeVos, it will only get worse.
Even with Lenín Moreno’s presidential victory, the Ecuadorian left is in dire need of reconstruction.
Harry Hay would have been 105 this month. His life and work as a gay man and a Communist helped lay the foundations of the modern LGBTQ movement.
Recent regional elections in India handed Modi’s BJP important new majorities. How can it be stopped?
There are no “humanitarian” wars. There are only wars.
In the heated propaganda war between Russia and the “West,” rationality is in short supply.
Rally against US imperial intervention, but remember Assad’s crimes and be in solidarity with his victims.
From Donald Trump to Jacob Zuma, we can’t reduce politics to “getting rid of the bad guys” and expect to win.
The Finns rose to become one of Europe’s most prominent right-populist parties. Then they joined government.
As long as liberals cheerlead Trump’s military action in Syria, right-wing hawks barely have to lift a finger.
The bombing of Syria lays bare the impulsive violence of Trump’s foreign policy and the rot of American democracy.
A photo essay on Sisi’s Egypt, where ordinary citizens endure daily injustices and deepening repression.
A profit-hungry pharmaceutical industry and an indifferent political class are fueling the deadly opioid epidemic.