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The mission of Democracy is to build a vibrant and vital progressivism for the twenty-first century that builds on the movement’s proud history, is true to its central values, and is relevant to present times.

Democracy will publish on a quarterly basis and serve as a place where ideas can be developed and important debates can be spurred.

We do not seek to publish policy papers; we’ll leave the important details on budget line items and dollar figures to others. Rather, we seek breakthrough thinking on the concepts and approaches that respond to the central transformations of our time: the breakdown of the ladder of upward mobility; the promise and problems of an information-based, globalized economy; new national security threats which cross old boundaries and defy old assumptions from jihadist terrorism and nuclear proliferation to climate change, pandemics, and poverty; and a society where people work and live in new and different ways.

Progressives have been at their best when we are both rigorous in looking at the world as it is and vigorous in introducing creative approaches to remake the world as we believe it should be. Democracy is not interested in either reiterating the conventional wisdom or maintaining unity around outdated orthodoxies. We see our role as upsetting tired assumptions, moving past outdated and obsolete divisions, and stretching the envelope of what is accepted by and of progressives.

Our ambitions are large – as is the scale of the work before us – but we have no doubt that ideas can change the course of our nation. Now is the time to fashion a new progressivism for the twenty-first century, and we welcome all who are willing to join in this conversation.

Read the Editors' introductory letter from Issue 1

 

Obama Proposes Consumer Financial Protection Agency

News: President Barack Obama has proposed the creation of a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, an idea first written about in Democracy.

Failure to Blossom

Ronald Brownstein: Why did so many smart writers believe that Karl Rove's vision would succeed—and that Democrats had to mimic it?

The Values That Didn't Fail

Michael Tomasky: The twentieth anniversary of the fall of communism serves as a reminder that liberalism makes the right kind of "regime change" possible.

The Democracy Rule

James Traub: We can abandon Bushism—and still care how states treat their people. A response to Charles Kupchan and Adam Mount.

Beyond Guantánamo

Sarah E. Mendelson: Obama has to reclaim America's human rights mantle—and not some day, but this year, when the world is watching.

Davy Jones's Logic

Jonathan Stevenson: Why modern-day Captain Hooks respond to the invisible hand.

May It Please the Country

Eric Lane and Aziz Huq: For those worried about the Roberts Court: History shows that conservative Supreme Courts are surprisingly accommodating to liberal agendas.

The Zombie Party

Jonathan Rauch: Sarah Palin isn't the future of the Republican Party. But Charles Murray just might be.

The Washington Post Cites Warren's Democracy Article

News: The Financial Product Safety Commission, an idea originated in the pages of Democracy by Elizabeth Warren, is on the drawing board at the Obama White House, reports The Washington Post.

Senators Kennedy, Schumer and Durbin Introduce Financial Product Safety Commission Legislation

News: Senators Dick Durbin, Ted Kennedy and Chuck Schumer have proposed creating a Financial Product Safety Commission, an idea that originated in Democracy.

Michael Tomasky to Become Editor of Democracy

News: Michael Tomasky, a highly respected writer and editor with more than 20 years' experience covering American politics and helping to define and update progressive ideas, will join Democracy: A Journal of Ideas as its Editor.