It’s Hard to Imagine a Worse Idea Than a Hybrid Democratic Convention
If Democrats try to sideline protesters by opting for a semi-virtual convention, it will be a huge betrayal of the Democratic base.
Print Magazine
If Democrats try to sideline protesters by opting for a semi-virtual convention, it will be a huge betrayal of the Democratic base.
We face a choice between a negotiated settlement in Ukraine and the possibility of a catastrophic war.
Immediate climate action must be taken to keep communities safe, in the US and abroad.
For young people in Massachusetts facing queer- and transphobia, the statehouse feels very far away.
The statistical evidence is clear: Civilians in Gaza have overwhelmingly borne the brunt of Israel’s assault.
The countryside has been neglected for decades. A Rural New Deal would reverse that with capital and creative solutions writen by and for rural Americans.
A conversation with the legal scholar on why its unusual the Constitution is core to American national identity and his new book The Constitutional Bind.
Studies overwhelmingly show that the effect of increasing the minimum wage on employment rates is basically zero.
A hope for a more just future echoes across the decades from the pages of The Nation magazine.
We asked five student writers to talk about the pro-Palestine protests at their schools, how their administrations have responded, and what the next steps are for organizers.
The housing crisis is the logical outcome of real estate speculation and expanding unemployment—not an inevitable fact of life.
Hillary Clinton’s arrogance already lost one election. And if Joe Biden follows her example, it can easily cost another.
There’s now a real, organized effort to transform his resentments and impulses into policy. It’s called Project 2025.
The Heritage Foundation’s 1980 manual aimed to roll back the state and unleash the free market. The 2025 vision is more extreme, and even more dangerous.
How the Christian nationalist vanguard would pursue unprecedented power over all branches of government.
A second Trump administration could weaponize existing government agencies to dismantle democracy itself.
Should Trump win, conservatives have a plan to use the DOJ to make their darkest desires legal, while removing the legal means to stop them.
Project 2025 calls on Trump to run the country the way he did his businesses: as a crooked real estate mogul.
Under Trump, the Department of Health and Human Services would become the “Department of Life” once again—and worse.
With help from Project 2025, Trump will stall all attempts to avert the climate crisis, accelerating a catastrophe that we have only a few years to prevent.
Project 2025 lays out a vision of a new immigration enforcement agency that will be more effective than ever in deporting, detaining, and denying entry to immigrants.
Demonizing China allows Republicans to unite around an authoritarian agenda at home—and provides a convenient rationale for unfettered Pentagon profiteering.
If Project 2025 gets its way, a second Trump term will funnel more money to the Pentagon, dwarfing even the Biden administration’s spending.
A veteran of every major social movement of the past 50 years, Heather Booth is now trying to reelect Joe Biden. She’s in the fight of her life.
When the "Race to the Top" becomes winner take all, students are the big losers. And as the stakes grow higher and higher, public education falls further behind.
Throughout her long and prolific career, Carson has specialized in unexpected juxtapositions between modern life and ancient times, contemporary art and the literature of the past. ...
A revolutionary and an intellectual, a nationalist and a cosmopolitan, a doctor and a revolutionary, Fanon was always multiple.
In his most recent album, the composer marks a new turn in his style.