"Triplicity, or Donkey, Moose or Elephant", by L.
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And Ro Khanna, a Democratic congressman from Silicon Valley, argues for how to reframe the Democratic narrative. We ask Elaine Kamarck, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and author of “The New Politics of Evasion”, how the central myths of the Democratic party have changed.
Pramila Jayapal, chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, makes the case for progressive success beyond the mid-terms. How did the party lose touch with its voters? And does a flurry of recent dealmaking suggest it can moderate in time to avoid electoral disaster? In some liberal cities, voters are in open revolt against progressive policies. Working class and Hispanic voters seem to be turning away from the Democrats. Despite Donald Trump remaining at its head, the Republican Party is widely expected to make significant gains in the upcoming mid-term elections. The Democratic party is in the throes of a rude awakening. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, _download Audm for iPhone or Android_._ _This story was written by Marcela Valdes and recorded by Audm. Valdes learned about the previous unsuccessful attempts to cultivate Black audiences, and considered the intricacies of an industry culture that still struggles to “overcome the clubby, white elitism it was born in.”Īs one publishing executive puts it, the future of book publishing will be determined not only by its recent hires but also by how it answers this question: Instead of fighting over slices of a shrinking pie, can publishers work to make the readership bigger for everyone? Interviewing more than 50 current and former book professionals, as well as authors, Ms. The journalist Marcela Valdes spent a year reporting on what she described as “the problematic history of diversity in book publishing and the ways it has affected editors, authors and what you see (or don’t see) in bookstores.”
Now a new cadre of executives is trying to open up the industry. For generations, America’s major publishers focused almost entirely on white readers.