
Hungary: The End of Democratic Illusions?
The government-sponsored attack on the Central European University represents one more step in the country’s authoritarian drift.
Karl Leffme is a socialist in New York CIty.
The government-sponsored attack on the Central European University represents one more step in the country’s authoritarian drift.
By refusing to negotiate with recently unionized graduate workers, Yale president Peter Salovey has announced in writing that the university will defy US labor law.
Democratic Party elites don’t have ideals. They just need you to be scared of the Republicans.
Israel is not the only democracy in the Middle East. In fact, it’s not a democracy at all.
Where did Le Pen’s vote come from — and what does it mean?
How SNCC’s research department helped civil rights organizers fight Jim Crow.
Ja Rule’s Fyre Festival gave us a chance to laugh at rich kids. It also told us something about modern culture.
Does the world need another journal? Probably not, but we’re giving you one anyway.
Podemos MP Manolo Monereo discusses the party’s origins, its first crisis, and what it would mean for it to govern.
The US brags about its commitment to democracy. But its interventions have yielded death and despotism for the Middle East.
To preserve and expand public education, educators and parents will have to fight not only free market zealots like Betsy DeVos, but Democrats like Dwight Evans.
Civil rights activists knew their struggle was incomplete without winning a just health care system. They’re an inspiration for single-payer activists today.
The Tories are doing great in the polls, but their coalition is more fragile than it looks.
Campaigns to silence criticism of Israel don’t protect Jews — they endanger them.
We’re looking for a circulation manager.
Forget the first 100 days — Jacobin contributors weigh in on Trump’s first 103.
Thirty years ago, Ben Linder was gunned down by the American-funded contras while building infrastructure for the poor in Nicaragua.
Tech employees who increasingly see themselves as workers will be an important sector of resistance to Trump’s agenda.
The late Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm recounts the origins of International Workers’ Day. “The priests have their festivals,” announced a 1891 May Day broadsheet, “the Moderates have their festivals. The First of May is the Festival of the workers of the entire world.”
Eighty years ago, Barcelona’s calamitous May Days sealed the fate of a worker-led social revolution. George Orwell was there to bear witness.