When I was younger and faster, I competed in 400- and 800-meter track events. Too long to run as a sprint, but not long enough for the kind of strategy milers and marathoners use, these distances baffled me; I could never figure out how to pace myself. Switching to longer distances gave me an attainable goal—to reach the finish line running.
Kamala Harris will get no such participation award. Like Biden before her, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee has one job between now and November: defeating Donald Trump. As many of us argued over the past few weeks, Biden was no longer up to the task. Is Harris?
As one will notice in Joan Walsh’s interview with the current VP—our August cover story—Harris seems admirably poised and even to be enjoying herself. In the works for months, Walsh and Harris had their final conversation just days before Biden’s debate debacle.
In When The Clock Broke, John Ganz offers a whirlwind tour of the cranks, conservatives, and con artists who helped remake the American right at the turn of the 21st century.
With 10 senators and Trump in attendance at the national Bitcoin conference, the crypto currency moves from the fringes to the center of political life.
The senator from Arizona refused to cosponsor labor’s top legislative priority when it mattered. Only when he made the vice-presidential short list did he step up from Arizona.
Hell-bent on stopping workers from unionizing, employers will sometimes shut down a location or an entire business—that’s what happened at the Star Garden topless bar in Los Angeles.