
Fighting the Klan in Reagan’s America
The KKK was on the march in the 1980s. What strategies worked to stem their rise?
Branko Marcetic is a Jacobin staff writer and the author of Yesterday’s Man: The Case Against Joe Biden.

The KKK was on the march in the 1980s. What strategies worked to stem their rise?

The face of right-wing anti-elitism is surprisingly elite.

How the Sierra Club came to dabble with neo-Malthusianism.

It's time to stop pretending that the same people fighting white supremacists are somehow exactly like them.

Kamala Harris has matched every one of her progressive achievements with conservative ones.

Journalists and politicians venerating John McCain's civility and decency have a short memory.

The Israel Anti-Boycott Act criminalizes a tactic used by some of history's great protest leaders.

Emmanuel Macron is a Silicon Valley-loving, union-hating, Third Way centrist. He’s no bulwark against the far right.

One place where Bernie could've learned from Jezza — foreign policy.

Liberals want to write off huge swathes of the United States. We shouldn't follow suit.

Mark Penn wants Democrats to move to the center. But the only thing the failed strategist is qualified to offer advice on is how to lose.

In the US and around the world today, political violence is the hallmark of the Right, not the Left.

Jeremy Corbyn showed the way for mass radical politics. He only had to fend off attacks from the Right, the press, and his own party to do it.

Chris Kennedy has thrown his hat — and his family's enormous wealth — into the Illinois governor's race. But does he really represent a progressive option?

J.K. Rowling, Barack Obama, the list goes on. Prominent liberals all opposed Jeremy Corbyn — and it didn’t matter.

Hillary Clinton is right that cashing in on speaking fees is nothing new. But neither is public criticism of it.

Tulsi Gabbard is hailed as a progressive champion. But her views on Islam and support for far-right leaders suggest otherwise.

It wasn't just petty infighting that tanked Hillary Clinton's campaign. It was the lack of any coherent program for the country.

Some people have abhorrent politics but pleasant personalities. Others are terrible people with good politics. Roger Ailes was neither.

There's nothing to celebrate about the FBI — it isn't, nor has it ever been, a guardian of democracy.