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Christopher Hayes | The Nation

Christopher Hayes

Author Bios

Christopher Hayes

Christopher Hayes

Editor at Large

Christopher Hayes is Editor at Large of The Nation and host of Up w/ Chris Hayes on MSNBC (Sat 7-9am and Sun 8-10am). From 2010 to 2011, he was a fellow at Harvard University’s Edmond J Safra Foundation Center for Ethics. From 2008-2010, he was a Bernard Schwartz fellow at the New America Foundation. From 2005 to 2006, Hayes was a Schumann Center Writing Fellow at In These Times.

Since 2002, he’s written about political culture and political economy. His essays, articles and reviews have appeared in The New York Times Magazine,TimeThe NationThe American ProspectThe New Republic,The Washington Monthly,The Guardian, and The Chicago Reader.

His book about the crisis of authority in American life will be published by Crown in spring 2012.

Chris grew up in the Bronx, graduated from Brown University in 2001 with a BA in Philosophy and now lives in Brooklyn with his wife Kate. 

Articles

News and Features

They’re hyper-educated, ambitious and well rewarded. So why are our elites so incompetent?

Is America finally learning that extreme inequality isn't just bad for those at the bottom—it’s ruinous for those on top, too?

It's time to banish our dangerously-simplified us-versus-them mentality and recognize the world as it is: shot through with suffering and complexity.

Transcript for the April 1, 2011, episode of The Breakdown, featuring Barry C. Lynn.

The biggest threat to economic recovery—and to President Obama's shot at re-election—is the price of gas. Why is Wall Street still allowed to aggravate the uncertainty in the market?

For the condo-buying, sushi-eating Beltway elite, the recession is over. For the rest of America—not so much.

The uprising in Egypt is a rare opportunity to support democracy without imperialism. Will Obama take the chance?

The most important vote of the 112th Senate will likely be its first.

A federal court in Virginia ruled Monday that an aspect of Obama's healthcare reform law is unconstitutional. In this previously posted episode of The Breakdown, Christopher Hayes asks Columbia law professor Gillian Metzger whether this argument holds up.

Republicans have spent their postelection victory lap fearmongering over the deficit. But now they've insisted all Bush tax cuts be extended, at great price to the national debt.

Blogs

I liked Richard's treatment of the New School occupation. I'm not sure what is in me, or our culture, or the generational attitudes of post...
My column in this week's issue of The Nation -- about the paper industry exploiting an alternative fuel tax credit -- has gotten some...
Over the weekend, during a drive to and from New York I listened to Steven Johnson's enjoyable and stimulating new book The Invention of...
From Greg Kaufmann: Now that Obama has announced his Af/Pak strategy there will be a whole host of hearings about it this week. One that...
A dispatch from Greg Kaufmann: On Budgets and Europe Thursday afternoon, I was one of the 18 viewers in the age 3 to 100 demographic...
Six weeks ago I wrote a column about Gary Gensler, Obama's problematic nominee to be chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission As...
I was in the East Room of the White House last night for the press conference. I was, alas, not one of the 13 journalists given an...
A Democratic politician once said of Arlen Specter that he's "always there when you don't need him." Well, the Employee Free Choice Act,...
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