Republicans Are Playing with Fire by Disparaging the FBI
When partisans become convinced that institutions are controlled by the other side, they stop listening to them.
Nick Ottens is a public affairs officer for the Dutch Animal Coalition and a board member for Liberal Green, the sustainability network of the Dutch liberal party VVD. He is a former political risk consultant and a former research manager for XPRIZE, where he designed prize competitions to incentivize breakthrough innovation in agriculture, food and health care. He has also worked as a journalist in Amsterdam, Barcelona and New York for EUobserver, NRC, Trouw, World Politics Review and Wynia’s Week, among others.
When partisans become convinced that institutions are controlled by the other side, they stop listening to them.
No Italian prime minister is going to start an EU-level rebellion to help Vladimir Putin.
Growth is concentrated in Democratic-leaning cities, yet Republicans from the countryside hold all the power.
What has happened since the election in December.
The nationalist insurgency is eating away at free trade and eroding democratic institutions and norms.
Parag Khanna and Fred Kaplan disagree.
“If you say take it or leave it, you have to be prepared for leave it.”
The system is broken. Don’t wait for an even worse crisis before fixing it.
Republicans are giving up on democracy.
Mobilize their base or appeal to moderates and undecideds?
Fuel political disillusionment or risk throwing away a deal on Europe?
Britain now accepts it will need to keep most EU laws and regulations on the books to avoid damaging its trade.
Conservatives used to understand that a strong state would put personal freedoms at risk.
Neither side is in the majority, but the conflict between them should worry us all.
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