Can the UAW Finally Organize the South?
Postwar failure to organize the South entrenched racism and corporate greed. Now there’s a chance to course-correct.
Print Magazine
Postwar failure to organize the South entrenched racism and corporate greed. Now there’s a chance to course-correct.
Elon Musk is challenging the New Deal legislation that established the National Labor Relations Board. Experts warn that this is “a serious threat.”
The Cold War alliance long ago outlived its usefulness. But then Nation contributors have been skeptical since the beginning.
Brodner, a frequent contributor to The Nation, is both a great caricaturist and a great portraitist.
… is dismissing them as out of reach for Democrats.
Two writers look at the evidence come to different conclusions about the president’s reelection prospects.
Despite having to move the clinic out of Texas, the founder of Whole Woman's Health continues to fight for abortion access in the new "border states."
An end to the war in Gaza would force the country to face some fundamental truths.
Coming just days after Putin’s orchestrated election, will it endanger his legacy—and his future?
For as long as Americans have been subjected to lousy candidates, they’ve been told to suck it up and vote for one of them.
Geologists may have voted down formal recognition of the Anthropocene as a geological epoch, but we still need to act to prevent ecological crisis.
We’ve privileged constant renovation over resilience, and it’s damaged the aesthetics and functionality of domestic architecture.
Banning the app in the US would destroy a hub for progressive organizing and cultural influence.
The factory floors at America’s top seller of electric vehicles are rife with racial harassment, sexual abuse, and injuries on the job.
An interview with Gillian Slovo, whose new play about the survivors of the Grenfell Tower fire in London just opened in New York.
To a growing contingent of right-wing evangelical Christians, Donald Trump isn’t just an aspiring two-term president. He’s an actual prophet.
The island’s health system is on its knees. Doctors are fleeing in droves. And the crisis is hurting kids most of all.
The former student activist and mayor of Mexico City is poised to make history with an ambitious platform on education, clean energy, and combatting violence against women.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s 1967 speech condemning the Vietnam War offers a powerful moral compass as we face the challenges of our time.
The president set out to chart a more pacific and humane foreign policy after the Trump years but at some point he and his team of advisers lost the plot.
A new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art explores the world-spanning art of the Harlem Renaissance.
In No Judgment, the novelist and critic explores the perilous activity of literary criticism in the era of social media.
In Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here, Jonathan Blitzer examines how North and Central American migration moves in two directions.
Larry David is the last of his kind—and in several ways.
In Insano, the rapper and hip-hop artist comes back down to earth.