The Political Scene | The New Yorker – Details, episodes & analysis
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Join The New Yorker’s writers and editors for reporting, insight, and analysis of the most pressing political issues of our time. On Mondays, David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker, presents conversations and feature stories about current events. On Wednesdays, the senior editor Tyler Foggatt goes deep on a consequential political story via far-reaching interviews with staff writers and outside experts. And, on Fridays, the staff writers Susan B. Glasser, Jane Mayer, and Evan Osnos discuss the latest developments in Washington and beyond, offering an encompassing understanding of this moment in American politics.
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🇨🇦 Canada - politics
02/06/2026#45🇬🇧 Great Britain - politics
02/06/2026#71🇩🇪 Germany - politics
02/06/2026#100🇺🇸 USA - politics
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01/06/2026#56🇺🇸 USA - politics
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01/06/2026#74🇨🇦 Canada - politics
31/05/2026#55
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The Oligarchs Are Fighting
samedi 7 juin 2025 • Duration 33:09
The Washington Roundtable discusses the fallout from the messy rupture between Donald Trump and Elon Musk, how battles between maximalist rulers and the mega-wealthy have unfolded in history, and how this week’s fighting could portend a new, more combative phase of American oligarchy. They talk about America’s new Gilded Age, drawing on “The Haves and Have-Yachts: Dispatches on the Ultrarich,” a new book by Evan Osnos, just out this week.
This week’s reading:
- “The Musk-Trump Divorce Is as Messy as You Thought It Would Be,” by Susan B. Glasser
- “Donald Trump’s Politics of Plunder,” by Evan Osnos
- “The Sublime Spectacle of Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s Social-Media Slap Fight,” by Jessica Winter
- “The Private Citizens Who Want to Help Trump Deport Migrants,” by Jessica Pishko
- “Can Public Media Survive Trump?,” by Jon Allsop
Tune in wherever you get your podcasts.
The Political Scene draws on the reporting and analysis found in The New Yorker for lively conversations about the big questions in American politics. Join the magazine’s writers and editors as they put into context the latest news—about elections, the economy, the White House, the Supreme Court, and much more. New episodes are available three times a week.
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choicesThe Man Who Thinks Trump Should Be King
jeudi 5 juin 2025 • Duration 38:24
The New Yorker staff writer Ava Kofman joins Tyler Foggatt to discuss her recent Profile of the iconoclastic right-wing blogger Curtis Yarvin. They discuss Yarvin’s desire to end American democracy by installing a monarch, whether his provocations can be seen as trolling, and how his writings have found a receptive audience among conservative politicians and the tech élite. “Obviously, Yarvin’s influence on the right is great, and maybe can’t be overstated,” Kofman says. “But, at the same time, a lot of these ideas he’s getting from having conversations with powerful people in Silicon Valley and with powerful people in Washington.”
This week’s reading:
- “Curtis Yarvin’s Plot Against America,” by Ava Kofman
- “Democracy Wins a Referendum in South Korea,” by E. Tammy Kim
- “Josh Hawley and the Republican Effort to Love Labor,” by Eyal Press
- “Trump Makes America’s Refugee Program a Tool of White Racial Grievance,” by Jonathan Blitzer
- “Elon Musk’s Vanishing Act,” by Jon Allsop
To discover more podcasts from The New Yorker, visit newyorker.com/podcasts. To send feedback on this episode, write to themail@newyorker.com.
The Political Scene draws on the reporting and analysis found in The New Yorker for lively conversations about the big questions in American politics. Join the magazine’s writers and editors as they put into context the latest news—about elections, the economy, the White House, the Supreme Court, and much more. New episodes are available three times a week.
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choicesHow Donald Trump Is Trying to Rewrite the Rules of Capitalism
lundi 5 mai 2025 • Duration 17:34
For a long time, Republicans and many Democrats espoused some version of free-trade economics that would have been familiar to Adam Smith. But Donald Trump breaks radically with that tradition, embracing a form of protectionism that resulted in his extremely broad and chaotic tariff proposals, which tanked markets and deepened the fear of a global recession. John Cassidy writes The New Yorker’s The Financial Page column, and he’s been covering economics for the magazine since 1995. His new book, “Capitalism and Its Critics: A History,” takes a long view of these debates, and breaks down some of the arguments that have shaped the U.S.’s current economic reality. “Capitalism itself has put its worst face forward in the last twenty or thirty years through the growth of huge monopolies which seem completely beyond any public control or accountability,” Cassidy tells David Remnick. “And young people—they look at capitalism and the economy through the prism of environmentalism now in a way that they didn’t in our generation.”
Donald Trump Is Using the Presidency to Get Rich
samedi 3 mai 2025 • Duration 29:03
The Washington Roundtable discusses the unprecedented corruption of the federal government, including Trump Administration members’ self-enrichment through cryptocurrency schemes and the inaugural committee, and the gutting of parts of the government that are responsible for rooting out self-dealing from public life. It is a level of corruption so “outright” and “brazen,” the staff writer Evan Osnos says, that it constitutes “a new phase in American politics.”
This week’s reading:
- “Mike Waltz Learns the Hard Truth About Serving Donald Trump,” by Susan B. Glasser
- “How Donald Trump Is Expanding His Authority While Shrinking the Government,” by Jon Allsop
- “What Canadians Heard—and Americans Didn’t,” by Adam Gopnik
- “Trump’s Deportees to El Salvador Are Now ‘Ghosts’ in U.S. Courts,” by Jonathan Blitzer
- “Will the Trump Tariffs Devastate the Whiskey Industry?,” by Charles Bethea
- “A Life-Changing Scientific Study Ended by the Trump Administration,” by Dhruv Khullar
- “The Bureaucratic Nightmares of Being Trans Under Trump,” by Grace Byron
- “How Trump Is Helping Tycoons Exploit the Pandemic,” by Jane Mayer (July, 2020)
To discover more podcasts from The New Yorker, visit newyorker.com/podcasts. To send in feedback on this episode, write to themail@newyorker.com with “The Political Scene” in the subject line.
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choicesHow Bad Is It?: Andrew Marantz on the Health of Our Democracy
jeudi 1 mai 2025 • Duration 55:28
In a new recurring series on The Political Scene, the staff writer Andrew Marantz joins Tyler Foggatt to assess the status of American democracy. How does one distinguish—in the blizzard of federal workforce cuts, deportations, and executive orders that have defined the first hundred days of Donald Trump’s second term—actions that are offensive to some, but fundamentally within the power of the executive, from moves which threaten the integrity of our system of government? Marantz applies the lens of Viktor Orbán’s Hungary to analyze where we may be in a potential slide toward autocracy, exploring ways in which Trump has even gone beyond the “Orbán playbook.” Marantz and Foggatt also discuss what it would take to reverse democratic backsliding.
This week’s reading:
- “Is It Happening Here?,” by Andrew Marantz
- “One Hundred Days of Ineptitude,” by David Remnick
- “The Bureaucratic Nightmares of Being Trans Under Trump,” by Grace Byron
To discover more podcasts from The New Yorker, visit newyorker.com/podcasts. To send feedback on this episode, write to themail@newyorker.com.
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choicesCory Booker on America’s Crisis of “Moral Leadership”
lundi 28 avril 2025 • Duration 30:00
As Donald Trump continues to launch unprecedented and innovative attacks on immigrants, civic institutions, and the rule of law, the Democratic response has been—in the eyes of many observers—tepid and inadequate. One answer to the sense of desperation came from Senator Cory Booker, who, on March 31st, launched a marathon speech on the Senate floor, calling on Americans to resist authoritarianism. Booker beat the record previously held by Senator Strom Thurmond’s twenty-four-hour-long filibuster of the Civil Rights Act, in 1957, and he spoke in detail about Americans who are in desperate straits because of federal job cuts and budget slashing. “We knew . . . if I could last twenty-four hours and eighteen minutes, that we could potentially command some attention from the public,” Booker tells David Remnick. “That’s the key here . . . to deal with the poverty of empathy we have in our nation right now.” Yet Booker bridles as Remnick asks about Democratic strategy to resist the Administration’s attacks. Instead, he emphasized the need for “Republicans of good conscience” to step up. “Playing this as a partisan game cheapens the larger cause of the country,” he argues. “This is the time that America needs moral leadership, and not political leadership.”
A Politics of Fear Defines Trump’s First Hundred Days in Office
samedi 26 avril 2025 • Duration 30:38
The Washington Roundtable discusses the first hundred days of President Trump’s second Administration, and the fear, pain, and outrage reverberating through U.S. politics. The clinical psychologist and longtime Department of Justice official Alix McLearen is helping distressed government workers connect with service providers during this time. She joins the roundtable to discuss how a politics of fear is shaping the lives of federal employees and ordinary citizens alike, and strategies for coping when psychological forces like fear and trauma become governing principles.
This week’s reading:
- “Waiting for Trump’s Big, Beautiful Deals,” by Susan B. Glasser
- “The Conservative Lawyer Defending a Firm from Donald Trump,” by Ruth Marcus
- “The Immigrant Families Jailed in Texas,” by Jack Herrera
- “The Cost of Defunding Harvard,” by Atul Gawande
- “Donald Trump’s Deportation Obsession,” by Jonathan Blitzer
- “The Guerrilla Marketing Campaign Against Elon Musk,” by Anna Russell
- “The Supreme Court Finally Takes On Trump,” by Ruth Marcus
To discover more podcasts from The New Yorker, visit newyorker.com/podcasts. To send in feedback on this episode, write to themail@newyorker.com with “The Political Scene” in the subject line.
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choicesPope Francis’s Legacy and the Coming Conclave
mercredi 23 avril 2025 • Duration 31:17
Paul Elie, who writes about the Catholic Church for The New Yorker, joins Tyler Foggatt to discuss the life and legacy of Pope Francis, his feuds with traditionalist Church figures and right-wing political leaders, and what to expect from the upcoming papal conclave to determine his successor.
This week’s reading:
- “The Down-to-Earth Pope,” by Paul Elie
- “Pope Francis’s Tangled Relationship with Argentina,” by Graciela Mochkofsky
- “The Mexican President Who’s Facing Off with Trump,” by Stephania Taladrid
- “The Cost of Defunding Harvard,” by Atul Gawande
- “The Supreme Court Finally Takes On Trump,” by Ruth Marcus
Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choicesHow Science Fiction Led Elon Musk to DOGE
lundi 21 avril 2025 • Duration 19:06
Elon Musk, who’s taking his chainsaw to the federal government, is not merely a chaos agent, as he is sometimes described. Jill Lepore, the best-selling author of “These Truths” and other books, says that Musk is animated by obsessions and a sense of mission he acquired through reading, and misreading, science fiction. “When he keeps saying, you know, ‘We’re at a fork in the road. The future of human civilization depends on this election,’ he means SpaceX,” she tells David Remnick. “He means . . . ‘I need to take these rockets to colonize Mars and that’s only going to happen through Trump.’ ” The massive-scale reduction in social services he is enacting through DOGE, Lepore thinks, is tied to this objective. “Although there may be billions of [people] suffering here on planet Earth today, those are miniscule compared to the calculation of the needs of the billions of humans that will one day ever live if we can gain escape velocity from planet Earth. . . . That is, in fact, the math that lies behind DOGE.” Lepore’s BBC radio series on the SpaceX C.E.O. is called “X-Man: The Elon Musk Origin Story.”
Will the Supreme Court Yield to Donald Trump?
lundi 14 avril 2025 • Duration 27:31
Ruth Marcus resigned from the Washington Post after its C.E.O. killed an editorial she wrote that was critical of the paper's owner, Jeff Bezos. She ended up publishing the column in The New Yorker, and soon after she published another piece for the magazine asking "Has Trump's Legal Strategy Backfired?" "Trump's legal strategy has been backfiring, I think, demonstrably in the lower courts," she tells David Remnick, on issues such as undoing birthright citizenship and deporting people without due process. Federal judges have rebuked the Administration's lawyers, and ordered deportees returned to the United States. But "we have this thing called the Supreme Court, which is, in fact, supreme," Marcus says. "I thought the Supreme Court was going to send a message to the Trump Administration: 'Back off, guys.' . . . That's not what's happened." In recent days, that Court has issued a number of rulings that, while narrow, suggest a more deferential approach toward Presidential power. Marcus and Remnick spoke last week about where the Supreme Court—with its six-Justice conservative majority—may yield to Trump's extraordinary exertions of power, and where it may attempt to check his authority. "When you have a six-Justice conservative majority," she notes, there is"a justice to spare."
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