Issue #209

How privatization perverts education Profit-seeking in the banking and health care industries has victimized Americans. Now it’s beginning to happen in education, with our children as the products. There are good reasons—powerful reasons—to stop the privatization efforts before the winner-take-all free market creates a new vehicle for inequality. At the very least, we need the good…

Issue #208

Congressional Republicans focus on calming their divided ranks After a tumultuous week of party infighting and leadership stumbles, congressional Republicans are focused on calming their divided ranks in the months ahead, mostly by touting proposals that have wide backing within the GOP and shelving any big-ticket legislation for the rest of the year. Comprehensive immigration reform,…

Issue #207

Last call for state parties? For many state parties, the party may soon be over. State party officials across the country say the explosion of money into super PACs, nonprofit groups, and presidential campaigns has made fundraising more difficult. And some of those outside groups are starting to take over the traditional local roles state parties…

Issue #205

The GOP’s immigration conundrum House Republicans’ latest revolt against immigration reform spells potential trouble for the party’s 2016 presidential candidates. The last thing the GOP needs in 2016 is another primary season marked by debate and dissension over the fraught issue. The party’s handling of immigration reform legislation since President Obama won reelection with 71 percent…

Issue #204

Elizabeth Warren vs. the neoliberals: The battle over Americans’ retirement security In the last year or two, something remarkable has happened in American politics. After decades in which future deficits, mostly caused by healthcare costs and conservative tax cuts, were invoked by those seeking to slash Social Security benefits for reasons of ideology or pecuniary…

Issue #203

Fight over minimum age illustrates web of industry ties Just four blocks from the White House is the headquarters of the Employment Policies Institute, a widely quoted economic research center whose academic reports have repeatedly warned that increasing the minimum wage could be harmful, increasing poverty and unemployment. But something fundamental goes unsaid in the institute’s reports: The…

Issue #202

Colorado and the future of the Democratic Party Last month, Colorado opened its first retail marijuana shops. At the Colorado Springs airport, there are now bins to help departing travellers remember to drop their pot before flying off to less liberated states. The law legalizing marijuana in Colorado was the result of a long grass-roots…