Obama’s America Is Trump’s America Is Biden’s America
American Compass’s Oren Cass discusses the 2020 election, arguing that the outcome simply tells us who will govern us, not who we are.
American Compass’s Oren Cass discusses the 2020 election, arguing that the outcome simply tells us who will govern us, not who we are.
American Compass’s Oren Cass argues that the future of conservatism lies in a multi-ethnic, working-class coalition.
Itâs now clear that Joe Biden will be Americaâs next president. While Democrats will undoubtedly celebrate this fact, the overall election results should give little comfort to them, given their failure to re-establish the partyâs historically successful New Deal coalition, especially the working-class component.Â
A contested electionâespecially one in which an unelected body casts the final voteâis the worst possible outcome next week. Trump winning in a landslide would be preferable. So would a Biden blowout.
In the weeks leading up to Amy Coney Barrettâs confirmation as Supreme Court Justice, much was written about the new conservative feminism that Barrett arguably embodies. But as Ross Douthat asked in his column at The New York Times, âcan there be a conservative feminism thatâs distinctive, coherent and influential, at least beyond quirky religious subcultures like the faculty at the University of Notre Dame?â
In his excellent American Compass essay âThe Five Deadly Sins of the Leftâ, Ruy Teixeira calls out the left for what he terms their âtechnopessimismâ. He writes: âthe Left has Read more…
In March 2016, as Donald Trump was headed toward securing the nomination of the Republican party for president at the Republican national convention in July, I published a piece in The National Interest about the collapse of the establishment Republican agenda. Today, on the verge of the 2020 election, my essay is as relevant as ever:
If a realigned Republican Party is to emerge as a viable national political force, the ever-incisive Henry Olsen will be one of its leading architects. His American Compass essay, “The Three Deadly Sins of the Right,” once again shows us why. I would merely like to expand upon Olsen’s groundwork.
I will happily agree that those are three of the sins of the American Right. But while Olsen ties snobbery and hubris primarily to Republican religiosity, separating them out from market fundamentalism, I consider the three of a piece with each other, and Olsenâs concern about GOP Christianity a bit of a red herring.Â
PRESS RELEASEâAmerican Compass’s October collection explores how Democratic and Republican establishments have been co-opted by a ruling class with little connection to most Americansâ needs.
In this commentary for the Financial Times, Cass considers what the presidential candidates would be talking about if workers and their interests were of primary concern
Market Fundamentalism. Snobbery. Hubris.
Identity Politics. Retro-Socialism. Catastrophism. Growthphobia. Technopessimism.
Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX-2) underscores the importance of discussing labor, middle-class issues, and industrial policy on the right-of-center.
Donald Trumpâs presence in 2016 was heralded as a fundamental shock to the system, as a new way for the Republican Party, as a final nail in the coffin of zombie Reagan-era public policy pushed by the billionaire and think tank class in Washington.Â
The Republican Study Committeeâs American Worker Task Force has just released a new report, âReclaiming the American Dream: Proposals to Empower the Workers of Today and Tomorrowâ. As such it Read more…
The death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg less than 50 days before the 2020 election has dramatically increased the stakes of the election, and is exactly the type of September surprise that could scramble Americans’ voting patterns this late in the game.Â
American Compassâs Oren Cass comments on the conceptual tensions underlying Congress’s standoff on COVID-19 economic relief packages.
Much as the Brexit referendum anticipated the rise of the Trump presidency, the current UK Conservative government led by Prime Minister Boris Johnson may now be providing clues as to a possible future path for the post-Trump Republican Party in the United States.
American Compass’s Oren Cass spotlights the ideological contest between libertarian Republicans and post-Trump conservatives for the future identity of the American political right.
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