Realignment Conference: The Future of Populism
American Affairsâs Julius Krein, American Compassâs Wells King, and the Niskanen Centerâs Samuel Hammond discuss the new right, populism, and the debate over neoliberalism.
American Affairsâs Julius Krein, American Compassâs Wells King, and the Niskanen Centerâs Samuel Hammond discuss the new right, populism, and the debate over neoliberalism.
Not What They Bargained For, the American Compass survey of worker attitudes, highlights the ways that the labor movementâs focus on progressive politics has undermined its own popularity and alienated the lower and working classes. Workers similarly disdain âwokeâ employers.
Americans want creative policymaking that better supports families, but always with the expectation that families receiving public support are also working to support themselves.
When politicians inflame the passions that divide us, it might lead to a boost in the polls, but it leaves us feeling more and more frustrated with our friends, our neighbors, and even our own family members.
As the big loser in 2020, the GOP should consider what it can learn from Britainâs Conservative Party, which offers a compelling policy matrix.
Thereâs an easy way to tell when politicians think weâre idiots. They have this way of dancing around the answer when they are asked a question, when even a simple âyesâ or ânoâ would do the trick.
Any political movement or political party worth its salt, when confronted with data evincing the sordid state of the American family, ought to respond by substantively prioritizing the American family’s institutional rejuvenation.
It would be nice if politicians did their job and represented us. Half the time I donât even know if they know the first thing about the places they claim to represent, much less the people who live here. What is the point of having a democracy if nobody will listen to you?
The 2020 election bears the most resemblance to 1980, which ushered a transformed Republican Party into the White House and Senate for the first time since 1954.
American Compass executive director Oren Cass discusses President Biden’s first days in office and why he should focus on policies that help working Americans.
Democrats and Republicans alike should feel free to contradict their putative leaders, for they contain multitudes.
Our present predicament, characterized as it by an emboldened and rapacious post-U.S. Capitol siege Big Tech edifice all too eager to dutifully serve as a repressive ruling class appendage, was perfectly encapsulated on Friday by two of my Commons co-bloggers.
In 2020 Donald Trump won 40 percent of voters who live in a household with at least one member in a labor union, slightly fewer than the 42 percent of union households who voted for him in 2016. With the exception of Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden won fewer union households than any recent Democratic presidential candidate.Â
Marshall Auerback discusses how a principled populism that addresses working-class interests could emerge in the GOP.
American Compass’s Oren Cass discusses the tension between worker power and loose immigration policy.
âPopulismâ is a term that since the modern era has been generally trotted out to mean a political attitude that reflects widespread anger and resentment against powerful elites, while among stenographers for the power class, populism has been reflexively trotted out to warn against the passions and wants of the mob.
In a recent conversation hosted by American Compass, âWhat Next: A Multi-Ethnic, Working-Class Conservatism,â Ohio Congressman Anthony Gonzalez discussed the skills gap. â[T]he number one issue that I hear from employers is, I have jobs, I could hire 10 people tomorrow, but either the folks donât want to do the work that we have, or I just canât find the right people.â
A few years ago, the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF, the tech policy think tank I lead) surveyed several hundred DC policy folks to find out, among other things, what they thought ITIFâs political orientation was. About 40 percent said we were moderate, a third said we were conservative, and a quarter said we were liberal. Assuming the latter two groups werenât clueless, it reinforced to me that on economic policy, the old conservative-liberal lines are anachronistic.
The Trump Presidency in Review
While Joe Biden will be the 46th President of the United States and Donald Trump will join the small club of incumbents who could not get re-elected, itâs fair to say that Bidenâs triumph was not so overwhelming that it even begins to settle the question of which party will dominate the 2020s.
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