38 afleveringen

The podcast in search of an honest conversation about the vast political changes going on in America.

The Political Conversation Wally Knox

    • Nieuws

The podcast in search of an honest conversation about the vast political changes going on in America.

    Hein de Haas: How Immigration Really Works

    Hein de Haas: How Immigration Really Works

    Biden is making a move on immigration — he has to because, as it stands, it's the Republicans issue to win on. Will it matter? For both the election, and at the border, this remains an open question. 



    It's tempting to think of immigration in black and white terms — or, rather, in terms of the left and the right. But what Hein de Haas, author of "How Immigration Really Works" and a leading researcher in the field, teaches us is that many of our common beliefs about immigration — coded red and blue — could benefit from a hard look at the data.



    His work shines a light on the connection between migration and the decline of the US middle class, while explaining that we got to where we are not because of the invisible forces of a nameless group of migrants, but because of the very real, very American, policy choice we have made. 

    • 46 min.
    Is DEI a top-heavy bureaucracy? For Harry Lewis at Harvard, it is.

    Is DEI a top-heavy bureaucracy? For Harry Lewis at Harvard, it is.

    Lewis, a notable and long-standing member of the Harvard faculty, worries about the state of American education — what do we want our students to learn? For him, too much emphasis is placed in course catalogs on intersectionality, and too little on a more canonical foundation of understanding. 



    For Lewis, the campus protests are a mere symptom — we are "reaping what we have taught."



    Harry Lewis is the Gordon McKay Research Professor of Computer Science at Harvard, and was the Dean of Harvard College for 8 years around the millennium. 

    • 1 u.
    Can the Democrats win if their only base is college educated elites? With Michael Kazin

    Can the Democrats win if their only base is college educated elites? With Michael Kazin

    As Gallup finds that only 28% of people consider themselves Democrats, the eminent historian Michael Kazin’s fascinating new book What It Took To Win asks if “college educated cosmopolitans in search of a majority” have driven out ordinary working people — the people we need to win. 



    Michael Kazin is a distinguished professor of history at Georgetown University and Co-Editor of Dissent magazine. While a student at Harvard in the 70s, Kazin led Students For A Democratic Society and today he is a member of Democratic Socialists of America. He is the author of Barons of Labor, The Populist Persuasion, and America Divided.

    • 28 min.
    "The 2024 Election Will Be Determined by Who People Dislike More"

    "The 2024 Election Will Be Determined by Who People Dislike More"

    Michael Kazin introduces the concept of "moral capitalism" while discussing his new book, "What it Took to Win." Kazin is a professor of history at Georgetown University and editor emeritus of Dissent.



    His books include American Dreamers: How the Left Changed a Nation, The Populist Persuasion, and A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and editor of The Princeton Encyclopedia of American Political History.

    • 27 min.
    Why Party Loyalty is Fading and Independent Voters are Surging, With Lynn Vavreck

    Why Party Loyalty is Fading and Independent Voters are Surging, With Lynn Vavreck

    As party loyalty declines, independent voters are becoming a powerful force in politics. In this video, we'll discuss the rise of independent voters and the impact they're having on elections, as well as the impact that extremely polarized or calcified politics is having on the voting public. We also discuss that in 2022 no candidate who lost called for an insurrection to overturn the results.  Is the fever breaking?

    Our guest is Lynn Vavreck, a political scientist at UCLA and leading researcher into the electorate. We dive into the analysis of the most recent federal election in 2022, to look to the next one: November 2024. We touch on split-ticket voting, polarization and calcification, and most importantly: whether we'll ever have majorities in Congress big enough to confidently govern us all.

    • 34 min.
    The Bitter End: 2024 US Election Voter Analysis with Lynn Vavreck

    The Bitter End: 2024 US Election Voter Analysis with Lynn Vavreck

    Today, politics feels both stuck and explosive, as both parties are becoming increasingly unrecognizable to the majority of voters. According to Lynn Vavreck, a political scientist at UCLA and leading researcher into the electorate, it has to do in no small part with this: Most voters identify as moderate, whether a moderate Republican or a moderate Democrat. She describes the state of our politics as "calcified", and her extensive research and analysis for her book The Bitter End serves as a guide into what the 2024 election has in store. 

    • 25 min.

Top-podcasts in Nieuws

Maarten van Rossem - De Podcast
Tom Jessen en Maarten van Rossem / Streamy Media
Boekestijn en De Wijk
BNR Nieuwsradio
NRC Vandaag
NRC
Weer een dag
Marcel van Roosmalen & Gijs Groenteman
de Volkskrant Elke Dag
de Volkskrant
Vandaag Inside Oranje
Vandaag Inside Oranje