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The Political Scene | The New Yorker
The Political Scene | The New Yorker
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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.
150 Episodes
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The Washington Roundtable discusses Donald Trump’s recent “explosion of the ego” and tendency toward megalomania, and they consider how the evolution of autocratic regimes in history can help us to predict how the rest of his Presidency may unfold. They are joined by Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a professor of history and Italian studies at New York University, who is the author of “Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present.” The group looks at how, as autocrats’ popularity decreases—as Trump’s has recently in the polls—these figures develop paranoia and entrench themselves in untenable positions, a phenomenon called “autocratic backfire.” “The key is that they end up constructing a kind of echo chamber. And so they overestimate their own abilities,” Ben-Ghiat says. “They start to believe their own propaganda.” This week’s reading:
“ ‘If We Don’t Have Free Speech, Then We Just Don’t Have a Free Country,’ ” by Susan B. Glasser
“Pam Bondi’s Contempt for Congress,” by Ruth Marcus
“Is There a Remedy for Presidential Profiteering?,” by David D. Kirkpatrick
“What Does Xi Jinping Want?” by Isaac Chotiner
“Bad Bunny’s All-American Super Bowl Halftime Show,” by Kelefa Sanneh
“Jeffrey Epstein’s Bonfire of the Élites,” by John Cassidy
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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The New Yorker staff writer Gideon Lewis-Kraus joins Tyler Foggatt to discuss his reporting on Anthropic, the artificial-intelligence company behind the large language model Claude. They talk about Lewis-Kraus’s visits to the company’s San Francisco headquarters, what drew him to its research on interpretability and model behavior, and how its founding by former OpenAI leaders reflects deeper fissures within the A.I. industry. They also examine what “A.I. safety” looks like in theory and in practice, the range of views among rank-and-file employees about the technology’s future, and whether the company’s commitment to building safe and ethical systems can endure amid the pressures to scale and compete. This week’s reading:
“What Is Claude? Anthropic Doesn’t Know, Either,” by Gideon Lewis-Kraus
“Is There a Remedy for Presidential Profiteering?,” by David D. Kirkpatrick
“Bad Bunny’s All-American Super Bowl Halftime Show,” by Kelefa Sanneh
“Listening to Joe Rogan,” by David Remnick
“What Do We Want from a Protest Song?,” by Mitch Therieau
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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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Ben Shapiro, the host of his eponymous podcast and the co-founder of the conservative website the Daily Wire, has lambasted the left and the Democratic Party for decades. Recently, though, Shapiro has taken to criticizing some of the loudest voices in the MAGA universe, including Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly. The rift is over the acceptance and promulgation of conspiracy theories and, in particular, the normalization of antisemitism. Shapiro discusses the Epstein files and what they show—and do not show—about the powerful people connected to Jeffrey Epstein. The belief in conspiracies of the élite reflects “people’s desire to abdicate control over their own lives,” Shapiro tells David Remnick. They discuss Shapiro’s adherence to the conservative value of personal responsibility, and how he squares that with MAGA and its champions. 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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The Washington Roundtable discusses Donald Trump’s threats to “nationalize” elections in fifteen states, the recent F.B.I. raid to seize 2020 voting records at an election facility in Fulton County, Georgia, and the ways in which the Administration might meddle with a free and fair vote in 2026. Their guest, Richard Hasen, is the director of the Safeguarding Democracy Project at U.C.L.A.’s School of Law. “I actually think that now is the time to be preparing for this,” Hasen says. “I think states and localities should think about getting injunctions from federal courts against Donald Trump to prevent him from interfering with the tabulation of ballots.”This week’s reading:
“Donald Trump Already Knows the 2026 Election Is ‘Rigged,’ ” by Susan B. Glasser
“Dan Bongino’s Podcast Homecoming,” by Jon Allsop
“Why the D.H.S. Disaster in Minneapolis Was Predictable,” by Jonathan Blitzer
“Is ICE Leading Us Into a Constitutional Crisis?,” by Isaac Chotiner
“How Jeff Bezos Brought Down the Washington Post,” by Ruth Marcus
“ ‘Melania’ Is a Forty-Million-Dollar Journey Into the Void,” by Lauren Collins
“How Trump Is Debasing the Dollar and Eroding U.S. Economic Dominance,” by John Cassidy
“Russia Is Swarming Europe with Young Agents,” by Ian Crouch
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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The New Yorker staff writer Lauren Collins joins Tyler Foggatt to discuss a new documentary about Melania Trump, which chronicles her life during the twenty days leading up to Donald Trump’s second Inauguration. They talk about the film’s glossy yet superficial portrait of the First Lady, who served as an executive producer, as well as its troubled rollout and poor critical reception. They also explore Melania’s tenure as First Lady and the contradictions at the center of her political identity as an immigrant married to a President whose anti-immigration rhetoric and policies have come to define both his Administration and the moment of the film’s release. This week’s reading:
“ ‘Melania’ Is a Forty-Million-Dollar Journey Into the Void,” by Lauren Collins
“What a ‘Melania’ Cinematographer Hoped to Accomplish,” by Isaac Chotiner
“How Jeff Bezos Brought Down the Washington Post,” by Ruth Marcus
“Why the D.H.S. Disaster in Minneapolis Was Predictable,” by Jonathan Blitzer
“Trump’s Profiteering Hits $4 Billion,” by David Kirkpatrick
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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The staff writers Emily Witt and Ruby Cramer discuss the situation in Minneapolis, a city effectively under siege by militaristic federal agents. “This is a city where there’s a police force of about six hundred officers [compared] to three thousand federal agents,” Witt points out. Cramer shares her interview with Mayor Jacob Frey, who talks about how Minneapolis was just beginning to recover from the trauma of George Floyd’s murder and its aftermath, and with the police chief Brian O’Hara, who critiques the lack of discipline he sees from immigration-enforcement officers. Witt shares her interviews with two U.S. citizens who were detained after following an ICE vehicle; one describes an interrogation in which he was encouraged to identify protest organizers and undocumented people, in exchange for favors from immigration authorities. Ruby Cramer’s “The Mayor of an Occupied City” was published on January 23rd. Emily Witt’s “The Battle for Minneapolis” was published on January 25th. 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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The Washington Roundtable is joined by the journalist and historian Garrett Graff to trace how post-9/11 immigration policy, which led to a surge in Border Patrol hiring, set the stage for today’s crisis in Minneapolis. The panel examines how ICE and C.B.P., created to protect Americans from outside threats, have been unleashed in America’s cities as what Graff calls "a fascist secret police." “The Border Patrol has never been intended to be a force that is routinely interacting with American citizens,” Graff says. “Full stop, period, let alone routinely patrolling American cities.”This week’s reading:
“Operation Trump Rehab,” by Susan B. Glasser
“The Green Monster,” by Garrett Graff for Politico, 2014
“Why Minnesota Can’t Do More to Stop ICE,” by Garrett Graff for Wired
“The Schoolchildren of Minneapolis,” by Emily Witt
“What ICE Should Have Learned from the Fugitive Slave Act,” by Jelani Cobb
“Do Federal Officials Really Have ‘Absolute Immunity’?,” by Isaac Chotiner
“Witnessing Another Public Killing in Minneapolis,” by Vinson Cunningham
“The Cruel Conditions of ICE’s Mojave Desert Detention Center,” by Oren Peleg
“Maybe the United States Can Be One of Mark Carney’s ‘Middle Powers,’ ” by Bill McKibben
“Trump’s Greenland Fiasco,” by Joshua Yaffa
“What MAGA Can Teach Democrats About Organizing—and Infighting,” by Charles Duhigg
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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The New Yorker writer and Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Charles Duhigg joins Tyler Foggatt to discuss why Republicans have been more successful than Democrats at building durable political coalitions. They talk about the difference between short-term mobilization and long-term organizing, why large-scale protests often fail to translate into lasting power, and how conservative groups have quietly built local infrastructure that may sustain the MAGA movement beyond Donald Trump’s Presidency. They also examine how the left’s efforts are impeded by debates over ideological purity, and whether a renewed focus on community-based organizing and pragmatic coalition-building could reshape progressive politics in the coming years. This week’s reading:
“What MAGA Can Teach Democrats About Organizing—and Infighting,” by Charles Duhigg
“Witnessing Another Public Killing in Minneapolis,” by Vinson Cunningham
“Do Federal Officials Really Have ‘Absolute Immunity’?,” by Isaac Chotiner
“The Battle for Minneapolis,” by Emily Witt
“The Cruel Conditions of ICE’s Mojave Desert Detention Center,” by Oren Peleg
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. Tune in wherever you get your podcasts.
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Last October, Bari Weiss—best-known as a contrarian opinion writer who launched the right-leaning Free Press—was appointed the new editor-in-chief of CBS News. Donald Trump has called her new regime “the greatest thing that’s happened in a long time to a free and open and good press.” The New Yorker staff writer Clare Malone wrote about Weiss’s hostile takeover of CBS for the January 26, 2026, issue of the magazine. In a conversation with David Remnick, Malone discusses her reporting on Weiss: how resigning from the New York Times launched Weiss to prominence as a crusader against what she has characterized as woke groupthink; how Weiss gained the support of Silicon Valley titans who had their own political grievances; and the headlines about Weiss’s rocky beginning as head of a news network, including the on-air travails of her new anchor, Tony Dokoupil. 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. Tune in wherever you get your podcasts.
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The Washington Roundtable discusses President Trump’s threats to acquire Greenland and his subsequent retreat. At Davos this week, the Canadian Prime Minister, Mark Carney, characterized the episode as “a rupture in the world order.” To analyze how Trump’s rhetoric has heightened concerns about the durability of the transatlantic alliance, the Roundtable is joined by Carl Bildt, the co-chair of the European Council on Foreign Relations and the former Prime Minister of Sweden. “I think what we need to do as Europeans is to do our own thing,” Bildt says. “We now have a United States that, from our point of view, is unpredictable.” This week’s reading:
“It’s Time to Talk About Donald Trump’s Logorrhea,” by Susan B. Glasser
“An Unhappy Anniversary: Trump’s Year in Office,” by Amy Davidson Sorkin
“The Overlooked Deaths of the Attack on Venezuela,” by Oriana van Praag
“The Ice Curtain,” by Ian Frazier
“How Europe Can Respond to Trump’s Greenland Imperialism,” by Isaac Chotiner
“The Congresswoman Criminalized for Visiting ICE Detainees,” by Jonathan Blitzer
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. Tune in wherever you get your podcasts.
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The New Yorker staff writer Jay Caspian Kang joins Tyler Foggatt to discuss the role the church has played in sustaining protest movements—and whether effective political dissent in the United States is possible without involvement from religious institutions. They talk about how churches have historically provided moral authority, infrastructure, and community to movements for social change, why those qualities have been difficult to replicate in the age of social media and mass protest, and what is lost when dissent becomes sporadic or primarily digital. They also examine whether churches still have the widespread credibility and organizing capacity to anchor protest today, and what it would take for religious institutions to once again embrace a central place in modern political life. This week’s reading:
"Can American Churches Lead a Protest Movement Under Trump?," by Jay Caspian Kang
"Inside Bari Weiss’s Hostile Takeover of CBS News," by Clare Malone
"An Unhappy Anniversary: Trump’s Year in Office," by Amy Davidson Sorkin
"The Overlooked Deaths of the Attack on Venezuela," by Oriana van Praag
"Why Trump Supports Protesters in Tehran but Not in Minneapolis," by Benjamin Wallace-Wells
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. Tune in wherever you get your podcasts.
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Before becoming a podcaster, Jennifer Welch had a successful career as an interior designer and co-starred in a reality show on Bravo. But, since 2022, she and Angie Sullivan, her co-host on the podcast “I’ve Had It,” have gained millions of fans as a sounding board for left-leaning political frustrations. These aren’t only concerns about MAGA but also about the Democratic establishment that she views as captive to a corporate agenda. Welch talks with David Remnick about her contentious interviews with Cory Booker and Rahm Emanuel, her belief in “dark woke,” and how a white Oklahoma woman in her fifties emerged as one of the most provocative voices on today’s left. 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. Tune in wherever you get your podcasts.
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The Washington Roundtable is joined by Robert Kagan, a historian and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, for a conversation about the pressures facing American democracy, the security of elections, and how these domestic tensions interact with the collapse of international norms. Nearly a decade after his prescient 2016 column for the Washington Post, “This is How Fascism Comes to America,” Kagan contends that the U.S. has moved beyond the warning and into a full democratic crisis. “There is no chance in the world that Donald Trump is gonna allow himself to lose in the 2026 elections, because that will be the end of his ability to wield total power in the United States,” Kagan says.This week’s reading:
“The Minnesota War Zone Is Trump’s Most Trumpian Accomplishment,” by Susan B. Glasser
“What It’s Like to Be Trump’s Closest Ally Right Now,” by Sam Knight
“A D.H.S. Shooting Puts Portland Back Under the Microscope,” by James Ross Gardner
“Jay Powell, the Prepster Banker Who Is Standing Up to Trump,” by John Cassidy
“How Donald Trump Has Transformed ICE,” Isaac Chotiner
“How Colombia’s President Reached an Uneasy Détente with Donald Trump,” by Jon Lee Anderson
“Iran’s Regime Is Unsustainable,” by Robin Wright
“The Supreme Court Gets Back to Work,” by Amy Davidson Sorkin
“The Lights Are Still On in Venezuela,” by Armando Ledezma
“How Marco Rubio Went from “Little Marco” to Trump’s Foreign-Policy Enabler,” by Dexter Filkins
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. Tune in wherever you get your podcasts.
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The New Yorker staff writer Dexter Filkins joins Tyler Foggatt to discuss Marco Rubio’s reëmergence as one of the most powerful, and most transformed, figures in Donald Trump’s second term. They talk about Rubio’s unlikely ascent to the dual roles of Secretary of State and national-security adviser, his journey from outspoken Trump critic to loyal enforcer, and what that evolution reveals about how power operates inside the Administration. They also examine Rubio’s central role in the U.S. abduction of the Venezuelan President, Nicolás Maduro, the dismantling of the State Department’s foreign-aid infrastructure, and the department’s growing reliance on coercion over diplomacy. This week’s reading:
“How Marco Rubio Went from “Little Marco” to Trump’s Foreign-Policy Enabler,” by Dexter Filkins
“Denmark Is Sick of Being Bullied by Trump,” by Margaret Talbot
“Iran’s Regime Is Unsustainable,” by Robin Wright
“The Supreme Court Gets Back to Work,” by Amy Davidson Sorkin
“What Comes After the Protests,” by Jay Caspian Kang
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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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U.S. intervention in other countries, whether overt or covert, is by no means new, and Daniel Immerwahr notes that the open embrace of expansionism by the President and associates such as Stephen Miller goes back to the nineteenth century. Immerwahr is a professor at Northwestern University and the author of the 2019 best-seller “How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States.” He discusses Trump’s disdain for international law; tensions between the U.S. and Russia and China; and the historical link between imperialism and appeals to masculine pride. 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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The Washington Roundtable discusses Donald Trump’s use of force in Venezuela, his desire to take over Greenland, and the historical echoes of the Administration’s new imperialist projects. The panel also considers Trump’s brand of “narcissistic unilateralism” and the increased risks of global conflict when foreign policy is based on one man’s whims. “Donald Trump wants to write his name into history,” the staff writer Susan B. Glasser says. “He wants every single person in the world to have to exchange their map for one of the United States that looks different, that looks bigger, and that everybody for all eternity will say, ‘Donald Trump did this.’ ” This week’s reading:
“Why Donald Trump Wants Greenland (and Everything Else),” by Susan B. Glasser
“Minneapolis Grieves, Again,” by E. Tammy Kim
“Mr. Mamdani’s (New) Neighborhood,” by Molly Fischer
“The Aggressive Ambitions of Trump’s ‘Donroe Doctrine,’ ” by Robin Wright
“What Will Become of Venezuela’s Political Prisoners?,” by Stephania Taladrid
“J. D. Vance’s Notable Absence on Venezuela,” by Benjamin Wallace-Wells
“The Dramatic Arraignment of Nicolás Maduro,” by Cristian Farias
“The Former Trump Skeptics Getting Behind His War in Venezuela,” by Isaac Chotiner
“Jack Smith’s Closing Argument,” by Ruth Marcus
“Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Big Breakup,” by Charles Bethea
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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The New Yorker staff writer Jon Lee Anderson joins Tyler Foggatt to discuss the U.S. military operation that captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and brought him to the United States to face narco-terrorism charges. They talk about the unprecedented nature of the raid, the shaky intelligence and legal rationale behind it, and what the operation reveals about the Trump Administration’s increasingly coercive approach to the region. They also examine what “running” Venezuela could look like in practice—from leaving Maduro associates in power to exploiting the country’s oil reserves—and how the intervention may reverberate across Latin America. This week’s reading:
“Regime Change in America’s Back Yard,” by Jon Lee Anderson
“Who’s Running Venezuela After the Fall of Maduro?,” by Jonathan Blitzer
“The Folly of Trump’s Oil Imperialism,” by John Cassidy
“The Brazen Illegality of Trump’s Venezuela Operation,” by Isaac Chotiner
“Can the U.S. Really ‘Run’ Venezuela?,” by Caroline Mimbs Nyce
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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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Across the country, data centers that run A.I. programs are being constructed at a record pace. A large percentage of them use chips built by the tech colossus Nvidia. The company has nearly cornered the market on the hardware that runs much of A.I., and has been named the most valuable company in the world, by market capitalization. But Nvidia’s is not just a business story; it’s a story about the geopolitical and technological competition between the United States and China, about what the future will look like. In April, David Remnick spoke with Stephen Witt, who writes about technology for The New Yorker, about how Nvidia came to dominate the market, and about its co-founder and C.E.O., Jensen Huang. Witt’s book “The Thinking Machine: Jensen Huang, Nvidia, and the World’s Most Coveted Microchip” came out this year. This segment originally aired on April 4, 2025.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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The writers Charles Duhigg, Cal Newport, and Anna Wiener join Tyler Foggatt for a conversation about artificial intelligence and the promises, myths, and anxieties surrounding it. The discussion was recorded before a live audience at The New Yorker Festival this fall. They explore the gap between Silicon Valley’s sweeping claims and what generative A.I. can actually do today, how people are using the technology for work, creativity, and emotional support, and why the tech’s most immediate political consequences may be the hardest to grapple with. This week’s reading:
“Trump Dishonors the Kennedy Center,” by David Remnick
“The Biggest Threat to the 2026 Economy Is Still Donald Trump,” by John Cassidy
“The Right Wing Rises in Latin America,” by Jon Lee Anderson
“Peter Navarro, Trump’s Ultimate Yes-Man,” by Ian Parker
“Americans Won’t Ban Kids from Social Media. What Can We Do Instead?,” by Jay Caspian Kang
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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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The Republican Susan Collins has held one of Maine’s Senate seats for nearly thirty years, and Democrats, in trying to take it away from her, have a lot at stake. Graham Platner, a combat veteran, political activist, and small-business owner who has never served in office, seemed to check many boxes for a progressive upstart. Platner, who says he and his wife earn sixty thousand dollars a year, has spoken passionately about affordability, and has called universal health care a “moral imperative.” He seemed like a rising star, but then some of his past comments online directed against police, L.G.B.T.Q. people, sexual-assault survivors, Black people, and rural whites surfaced. A photo was published of a tattoo that he got in the Marines, which resembles a Nazi symbol, though Platner says he didn’t realize it. He apologized, but will Democrats embrace him, despite ugly views in his past? “As uncomfortable as it is, and personally unenjoyable, to have to talk about stupid things I said on the internet,” he told David Remnick, “it also allows me to publicly model something I think is really important. . . . You can change your language, change the way you think about stuff.” In fact, he frames his candidacy in a way that might appeal to disappointed Trump voters: “You should be able to be proud of the fact that you can turn into a different kind of person. You can think about the world in a different way.” 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. Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts.
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📢ALL EYES ON IRAN. INTERNET CUT OFF by Iran regime and all land lines cut as well. Be the voice of Iranian people who fight bravely all over the country. Millions are in the streets right now📣
Panetta was also a congressperson, no?
America has followed Rome's path of empire with Continental expansion. Post WW II it has been a global empire with its dominance through military bases and the supremacy of the dollar. Thus the First Felon's will to caesarism is not an aberration as so many think. Is that why the court gave him imperial immunity and authorizes everything thru the shadow docket? And our system is riddled with corruption, cowardice, deceit and criminality. The more things change the more they remain the same.
The Roman Republic was an aristocratic empire and their conflict with Carthage was the greatest expression that it was dedicated to territorial expansion and dominance of the Mediterranean world. The Republic was dominated by the old aristocratic families. When Octavian became Augustus as the first emperor, the Republican empire transformed into a monarchial empire ruled by dynasties, some hereditary others emperors elevated by the military.
Trump being the countries Daddy is exactly what Jonathan Rauch has called Patrimonialism - like a mob boss, Trump wants everyone to depend on him and be loyal to him.
Trying to save wash RJK's magical thinking, and batshit insane "alternative views" is at best disingenuous as alternative science isn't science no matter what this reporter thinks.
how can I find the text of this listening?
Please stop saying, "He (Elon) started this company." He did not start Tesla.
Gavin Newsome wasn't that ahead of his time with gay marriage. Boulder Mayor Penfield Tate included marriage equality in the Boulder Bill of Right back in the 60s. He authorized his County Clerk to certify marriage licenses for same sex couples. He got death threats and the decision cost him his bid for reelection and the County Clerk is usually given credit for this progressive policy.
I hope he's right that the SCOTUS would stand.
Oh Gawd. He was "saved" by something. Highly doubt it was "God". Most of us, still existing here on Earth One-- know that that assassination attempt last summer was a complete and totally planned occurrence, that the orange lunatic was in on. There's so many reasons to make this claim-- mostly (and Im not even a gun expert)-- if you use a military-grade weapon, like the shooter had last summer, You. Don't. Miss. Your. Target... the way this guy did. Also-- the dude was NOT a "left wing lunatic" (like orange lunatic likes to call his critics). The dude was a .... (wait for it).... Registered Republican (aka: Maga cult member). And lastly... (takes deep breath)... just look at the pathetic behavior on display, as OL was being led off the stage; most others, in this kind of scenario... The Last thing you're going to be thinking of, right before being led off stage (and right after almost having your right ear completely torn off) is throwing up a righteous, indignatious fist. Right? Seems
The title of this episode could also easily be "The Death of Truth". "If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will come to eventually believe it. " J Goebbels
Why do learned journalists say things like "her and her late husband gave"?...
Kamala Harris on the Breakfast Club / Charlemagne tha Fob🙄 Really James Carville? Just another sign of how unresponsive Boomer Dems are to tha Culture. Newsflash he's not the voice of it. He's proven himself to be extremely problematic especially since his comments on Cassie Ventura last Dec. Hire Kendrick Lamar or Stacy Abrams or Tisa Tells before you all presume to know who tha Culture resonates with https://youtu.be/B-PaEufR9Zg?si=guzQP4iN2eW3TERI
what a show, these guys should take over Harris campaign immediately.
The interview is kinda short, isn't?
the grating voice of the woman makes this otherwise interesting podcast (an AUDIO medium) impossible to listen to. need to skip her parts to keep my sanity
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Tramp = idiot