
Can Stacey Abrams Turn the Tide in Georgia? Can Stacey Abrams Turn the Tide in Georgia?
Despite years of laying the groundwork, she’s trailing in the gubernatorial election. Will Georgia’s discouraged voters rise again to lift the nation?
Sep 13, 2022 / Joan Walsh

Michael Mann Returns to the Scene of the Crime Michael Mann Returns to the Scene of the Crime
Why did the director, for his first novel, write a sequel of Heat?
Sep 13, 2022 / Books & the Arts / Adam Nayman

Constellation of Transgressions Constellation of Transgressions
Bullets everywhere.
Sep 12, 2022 / OppArt / Holly Ballard Martz

God Save Us From the King God Save Us From the King
The British monarchy is nothing if not adaptable—but for how long?
Sep 12, 2022 / Jeet Heer

The DNC Moves to Block Debate on Dark Money, but We Won’t Quit The DNC Moves to Block Debate on Dark Money, but We Won’t Quit
The stakes are too high for Democrats—and democracy—to let our party’s primaries turn into auctions won by the highest bidder.
Sep 12, 2022 / James Zogby

Chile’s Constitutional Makeover, Take 2 Chile’s Constitutional Makeover, Take 2
The Boric government can recover from the lopsided rejection of Chile’s new Constitution by harnessing the energy behind the country's reform movement.
Sep 12, 2022 / John Dinges

Jana Prikryl’s Poetry of Perpetual Motion Jana Prikryl’s Poetry of Perpetual Motion
In her new collection, Midwood, she travels through the borders of space, time, life, and death.
Sep 12, 2022 / Books & the Arts / Rhian Sasseen

Trump Proves That Presidents Have Too Much Power Trump Proves That Presidents Have Too Much Power
The expansion of executive privilege under Bush and Obama gave their successor license he recklessly exploited.
Sep 12, 2022 / Chris Lehmann

The Left Takes Chicago The Left Takes Chicago
At the 2022 Socialism Conference, a new generation of radical young organizers revivifies the US left.
Sep 12, 2022 / Raina Lipsitz

The Southern Baptist Convention’s Deal With the Devil The Southern Baptist Convention’s Deal With the Devil
The roots of the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe go back 50 years, when zealots preaching a gospel of misogyny and homophobia—led by an accused sexual predator—took over America’s ...
Sep 12, 2022 / Feature / Sarah Posner