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Bernie Sanders has stopped his direct attacks on Hillary, and he’s been able to make some strong appointments to the platform committee for the Democratic National Convention. Is the unification of the party underway? Harold Meyerson explains.
Plus: Most “independent” voters in fact have long-standing ties to one party or the other—very few swing from one party to the other between elections. Joshua Holland has the facts.
And Tom Frank examines the “Hillary Doctrine,” her long-standing commitment to microfinance as the best way to help poor women around the world. It doesn’t work, he argues. Tom’s new book is Listen, Liberal!
Bernie is holding big rallies all over southern California this week—Santa Monica on Monday (left), Anaheim and Riverside on Tuesday, Lancaster today, Ventura tomorrow. John Nichols has our political update.
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Plus: The Prince of Sex: Richard Kim explains why Prince is a gay icon today—despite the artist’s lack of support for the gay movement.
John Nichols on yesterday’s primaries: Trump’s triumphs; and what’s left for Bernie now – beyond staying in thru California in June? John’s new book is People Get Ready.
Plus: political spin – we hate it! But is it really getting worse? Historian David Greenberg says probably not – his new book is Republic of Spin: An Inside History of the American Presidency.
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Plus: Hillary and Haiti—a long relationship, and a revealing one. Amy Wilentz comments.
And we speak with Viet Nguyen—his novel The Sympathizer just won the Pulitzer Prize. It begins in Saigon on the last day of the Vietnam war, and features a Viet Cong spy inside the Saigon army.
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And we’ll talk about genocide in Indonesia in the sixties, and its aftermath today, with documentary filmmaker JOSHUA OPPENHEIMER—his film 