The Election Is Getting Down to the Wire
It seems increasingly likely is that we’re headed for a tight race that, as in 2020, will be decided by voters in a handful of states.
Print Magazine
It seems increasingly likely is that we’re headed for a tight race that, as in 2020, will be decided by voters in a handful of states.
In her own right, and because we oppose Donald Trump’s reactionary agenda.
Until lawmakers decide that protecting our children is more important than protecting access to guns, we’ll continue to see students and their teachers die too soon.
Want an easy way to protect yourself, your loved ones, and your community? Make sure you get your shots.
Matt Bruenig writes that governments should nationalize more companies while Zephyr Teachout argues that freedom requires decentralized power.
Palestinians and Israelis on 365 days of slaughter, devastation, grief, and resistance.
Lujayn and Mohammed R. Mhawish and Meron Rapoport
Most of the predictions, advice, and scolding emanating from the glow of TV news this year have proved flat-out wrong. Democrats should stop listening once and for all.
Here’s a look at this week’s 2024 Democratic National Convention.
You don’t have to wield a T-square to benefit from the field’s first collective bargaining agreement in decades.
Most of the predictions, advice, and scolding emanating from the glow of TV news this year have proved flat-out wrong. Democrats should stop listening once and for all.
Is this a “Boys vs. Girls Election,” or yet another in which white women stick with white men?
Voters in this pivotal state grapple with an unfamiliar emotion: hope.
The Democrats could win control of Congress and the White House—if they run a truly national campaign.
Anti-immigrant think tanks and advocacy groups operated on the margins until Trump became president. Now they have molded not only the GOP but also Democrats in their image.
A new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum reveals how deeply embedded a Native woman’s perspective on our culture might be.
To understand the ambitions of the conservative majority, look no farther than Project 2025, which was cooked up by some of the same people who engineered the current court.
Sakinah discovered Chicago’s Abortion Counseling Service, better known as Jane, because she wanted to help a friend. Then she became an essential part of it.
In Intermezzo, we get characters acting out their political commitments instead of just talking about them. But is their vision of domestic cooperation enough?
The deep roots of debt relief activism in the United States.
A new history revisits “the Trial of the Century” and its legacy in contemporary politics.
Emily Witt’s memoir of Brooklyn's rave scene accomplishes something that even the cynical among us cannot deny: It will make you want to go dancing.
Emblematic of post–prestige television drama, AppleTV+’s spy thriller relies on the dyspeptic repartee and verbal sparring instead of sophisticated plot twists.