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In France, they compare Trump to Marine Le Pen. In Italy, to Berlusconi. In England, to Brexit. Amy Wilentz is back from Europe, where people are talking, of course, about Trump–and how much more powerful he is than their own local versions.
Also: How to Stop Trump: David Cole, incoming Legal Director for the ACLU, has some ideas.
And Harold Meyerson reviews the situation in Washington, and in Indiana, where Carrier Air Conditioning has agreed to cooperate with Donald Trump and keep 1,000 jobs in the USA–making America great again. 11/30/16
Trump Watch
LA, America’s Biggest Sanctuary City, vs. Trump: KPFK 11/23
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LA is the biggest sanctuary city in the country – Police Chief Charlie Beck and Mayor Eric Garcetti have declared they will refuse to cooperate with any Trump initiative to round up and deport undocumented immigrants – and now Trump’s incoming Chief of Staff Reince Priebus says Trump will cut off federal funds if LA remains a sanctuary city. HAROLD MEYERSON comments.
Also: we’re still working to understand how Trump won. ADAM SHATZ of the London Review of Books argues that Hillary never should have been the candidate– later in this hour.
Also: getting away from all that – sort of. TOM LUTZ has been on the road, traveling to many far-away places. His new book is And The Monkey Learned Nothing.
California: Hillary 62%, Trump 31%: KPFK 11/16
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In California Republicans are virtually powerless. Hillary got 61.5% of the popular vote, highest proportion in the country (except for Hawaii). Even Orange County, legendary as Goldwater Country, voted Democratic in the presidential race – first time since 1936. NARDA ZACCHINO explains — her new book is California Comeback: How a Failed State became a Model for the Nation.
Also: MIKE DAVIS analyzes the voting and argues that the real revolution of 2016 wasn’t Trump’s–it was the rise of the Bernie Sanders movement.
And JOHN NICHOLS argues that the Electoral College is fundamentally unfair.
Mourn, Resist, Organize: Katrina vanden Heuvel, The Nation Podcast 11/9
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Our tasks now: Mourn, Resist, Organize: KATRINA VANDEN HEUVEL lays out the path ahead as we confront the reality of Trump as president-elect.
Also: JOHN NICHOLS on the Democrats after Clinton.
and LAILA LALAMI on the most vulnerable people in the new Age of Trump: Muslims in America.
The End of Clintonism: Harold Meyerson on KPFK 11/9
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On our day-after show on KPFK, HAROLD MEYERSON says Hillary’s biggest problem wasn’t FBI director Comey–it was the legacy of her husband Bill’s turn toward globalism and deregulation, which left an angry and fearful and declining white working class.
Also: KATRINA VANDEN HEUVEL says we need to mourn — and then we need to resist and organize.
and AMY WILENTZ talks about the election, and the frightening prospects of Trump’s presidency.
Trump: The View from Muncie
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Gary Younge has spent a month in the rust belt city of Muncie, Indiana, talking politics with people there. The Trump supporters are well aware of his faults, but say they need “something big” to change things for them.
Plus: Katha Pollitt asks whether Trump’s misogyny will spark a wave of women’s political action.
Also, Tom Frank talks about email: he says the John Podesta emails—released by Wikileaks—tell us much more about how America is run than Hillary’s do.
And Adam Shatz argues that Obama’s presidency provoked a white backlash—and rekindled a spirit of black resis
Republican Repress the Vote, Dems Turn Out the Vote: KPFK 11/2
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HAROLD MEYERSON says Trump seems uniquely horrible, but is relying on a standard Republican electoral strategy: repress the vote. Hillary meanwhile is doing everything possible to turn out the vote.
Plus: TOM FRANK talks about the media treatment of Bernie Sanders: it was terrible.
And JOHN NICHOLS comments on some candidates we actually like — for the Senate, the House, and the Minnesota State Legislature.
Candidates we really like: The Nation podcast 10/27
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John Nichols talks about some of our favorite progressive candidates—for the Senate (Deborah Ross in NC), the House (Angie Craig in MN), and state legislatures—who show what good politics look like these days—and who have been endorsed by “Our Revolution,” the Bernie Sanders political group.
Also: Tom Hayden, who died on Sunday at 74, meant a lot to a lot of us, including Katrina vanden Heuvel—she comments on his amazing life as an activist and writer. Tom was a long-time member of the Editorial Board of The Nation and a frequent contributor to the magazine’s pages.
Plus: The documentary filmmaker, Deia Schlosberg, who was arrested while reporting on a climate-change protest in North Dakota. She is now charged with three counts of felony conspiracy and faces a possible sentence of up to 45 years.
The Progressive Movement after Bernie: KPFK 10/26
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HAROLD MEYERSON looks at what’s next for the millions of young people who voted for Bernie–at the prospects for sustained political commitment and action in other races this fall, and in two yearsl for example, the Bernie campaign successor organization, “Our Revolution.” Harold wrote about it for The American Prospect.
Plus TODD GITLIN remembers Tom Hayden – he succeeded Tom as president of SDS in the early sixties, and wrote about his life for Dissent and The Baffler.
Donald Trump’s ‘Horrifying’ Refusal to Accept the Election Results: The Nation podcast, 10/20
Joan Walsh comments—she’s The Nation’s National Affairs Correspondent.
aybe you heard the news: in the third debate, Donald Trump wouldn’t say he would accept the results of the election if he lost. Clinton called that “horrifying.”Plus: Kai Wright examines the media that have shaped the world-view of Trump supporters—it explains a lot about their thinking. Kai is host and producer of the podcast “The United States of Anxiety.”
And we’re still feeling good about Bob Dylan being awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature last week—we’ll talk about it, and listen to some Bob Dylan songs, with Greil Marcus—he’s the author of the book “Bob Dylan by Greil Marcus, Writings 1968-2010”