Vol 8 No 4

Winter 2025
  • Neal Meyer

The Democrats Embrace Dealignment

In the last 20 years, Democrats have worked diligently to bring their electoral strategy into line with their Clinton-era neoliberal economic program. Class dealignment was therefore no accident — it was the foreseeable (and foreseen) consequence of changes made by Democrats in their economic and electoral strategy.

  • Paul Heideman

Trump’s Takeover of the Republicans

While Donald Trump’s domination of the Republican Party is unprecedented in many ways, it has not altered the fundamental dynamics in the party, which predate his takeover. Since 2008, the party has been characterized by increasing internal conflict and institutional weakening. Far from counteracting these trends, Trump’s rule over the party has intensified both.

  • René Rojas
  • Maribel Tineo

The Latino Rebuke

Latino voters’ decisive contribution to Donald Trump’s return to power has puzzled progressive analysts. An analysis of Latinos’ material insecurity and labor market vulnerability shows that rejecting the Democrats and exploring entry into the MAGA coalition, while alarming, was predictable. Like blue-collar white voters in 2016, working-class Latinos did not embrace Trump because they are sexist xenophobes but rather because they lack alternatives for effectively defending their interests.

  • Lillian Cicerchia

The Futility of Hyperpolitics

Hyperpolitics seeks to politicize every space without prioritizing any particular one. While apparently left-wing, hyperpolitics is in fact a bourgeois radicalization with a distinctive social base and political culture. Progressives are wrong to think that it offers a pathway to social justice. It is in fact a symptom of middle-class hegemony in social movements, from which the Left must break out.

  • Alex Gourevitch

How Should We Work?

Axel Honneth’s recent book, The Working Sovereign, proposes a democratic alternative to Marxist and republican criticisms of the capitalist division of labor. Unfortunately, Honneth’s critique of contemporary capitalism suffers from false modesty, invalidly disqualifying more compelling, radical proposals for the transformation of work.

Review

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Culture Can’t Explain the Arab Revolts

Violence and Representation in the Arab Uprising shows how the Arab revolts empowered democratic citizenship. But a focus on vibrant cultural creativity is no substitute for concrete analysis of political agency and economic structure.