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This Time Tomorrow

Author: Taking the Fight to the Far-Right, with Omri, Benni and Daniela

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This Time Tomorrow is more than just a podcast about politics. It’s a mobilisation tool for progressive democrats all around the world. It’s a movement for a future-facing liberal democracy that spotlights the work of activists and their organisations as they take on anti-democratic far-right parties in local and national elections.

Don’t just listen to This Time Tomorrow — join us.

Help set the agenda.

Help bring the analysis.

Help democrats win the fight against those that threaten to take away our freedom.

Hosted by Omri Preiss, Benjamin Zeeb and Daniela Vancic. Produced by Ted Verver-Greijer.

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42 Episodes
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In the seventh episode of This Time Tomorrow, Omri and Benni talk about what’s been happening on the two sides of the Atlantic: 1) the accelerating collapse of what’s been known as the constitutional order of the United States of America, and 2) what Europeans have been calling ‘ReArm Europe’.What does this all mean for democracy in Europe and worldwide?For the US Democrats, the campaign of a lifetime awaits…This is no time for liberal democrats around the world to rest on their laurels. Source, clip at the top of the episode: YouTube, The Daily Show, “Jon Stewart Knocks Dems’…” This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
In Bulgaria, Gen Z has toppled the government after weeks of protests. What happened? Why? And what’s next? In the US, a longer version of the National Security Strategy has leaked… and, again, it’s bad news for democracy in Europe. In Israel, democrats are still reeling after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu asked president Herzog for a pardon for bribery and fraud charges and an end to a five-year corruption trial. Will he get one? And what does the country teach us about the autocrats’ playbook? Join Omri, Benni and Daniela for another report from the frontlines against autocracy and far-right populism. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
As fathers, this one is close to our hearts.Join Omri and Benni for the 33rd episode of This Time Tomorrow as they sit down with co-founder George Gabriel to talk about The Dad Shift — the campaign for better paternity leave in the UK.In a wide-ranging conversation, they dig into the economic case for better paternity leave, exploring why backing fathers isn’t just socially important, it also makes financial sense for families and the wider economy. They unpack the somewhat uncomfortable truth that the UK currently offers the worst paternity leave in Europe, and how this reality feeds into outdated expectations, toxic masculinity, and the cultural baggage that in some ways still shape what fatherhood is “supposed” to look like.George also lifts the curtain on the inner workings of The Dad Shift campaign, from how the idea first sparked, to the early organising efforts, to shaping the strategy and the practical, on-the-ground tactics being used to push for change. If you’re into political campaign design and herding cats (i.e. MPs and hundreds of activists!) then look no further. George has got the goods. Towards the end, George also shares where he hopes the campaign is headed, and what a transformed future for dads and families could look like.Go on now. Give it a listen. It’s a really powerful episode with real heart, real stakes, and a vision for what fatherhood and family life in the UK could be.And if you like the episode, then please share it with a friend to help us to grow our audience, and the Dad Shift to gain more followers and activists.As ever, thanks for listening. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
Sometimes, all you need to do is to enforce the law. Just enforce the law. In the 32nd episode of This Time Tomorrow, we give a nod of appreciation to the European Commission for doing the right thing and issuing a fine of €120 million to X for breaching its transparency obligations under the Digital Services Act. But is that enough? Is Elon Musk shaking in his boots? And what now?Next up, we head over to Washington to discuss the new US National Security Strategy… if that is what you should call it when you decide to abandon your European allies and hand over your foreign policy to Russia.Last, we travel east to Germany and take a look at the German Mittelstand’s flirt with the far-right. What’s happening with the German firewall? Are German SMEs inviting the AfD to step out of the cold and into… the foyers of mainstream society? Are you as concerned about the state of the world as we are? Not quite pleased with the global rise of anti-democrats and the far-right?Then join us. Become a democracy defender. Join a cause or a party, stand up for freedom and human dignity. Take action, action, action.Don’t wait. Do it today. And if you like this episode of This Time Tomorrow, then please share it with a friend to help us grow our audience.As ever, thanks for listening. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
When the political world begins to describe acts of cruelty as technical mastery, then that’s a sure sign that our collective humanity is starting to wither away. Gestures of tenderness, hesitation, or mercy start to look clunky… and inefficient. And when they disappear completely, cruelty no longer shocks us. Indeed, it simply looks like order is being restored.In this monologue, Ted applies Gonçalo M. Tavares’s novel, Learning to Pray in the Age of Technique (2011), to something Donald Trump said in a recent interview with 60 Minutes. Tavares’s main character—Lenz Buchmann—may be fiction, but his logic is not. Donald Trump is definitely not fiction—but his logic is the same. The danger is not just that such men gain power, but that we begin to see the world through their eyes.TW: violent/sexual imagery.Make sure you never miss an episode of This Time Tomorrow—hit subscribe or follow, and please leave us a review. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
The 30th episode of This Time Tomorrow is about the cost of conviction. It’s about the vulnerability that comes with standing up for what’s right, the pain of being ruthlessly targeted, and the resilience it takes to… keep going. Join Omri and Benni as they speak with Nina Jankowicz, who in 2022 briefly led the Disinformation Governance Board at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Just three weeks in, an onslaught of personal attacks—and a lack of support from the Biden administration—drove her to resign. At a time when President Trump and the rest of the autocracy gang are threatening democratic institutions, this kind of bravery is not optional. It is essential for all who believe in democracy. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
Antilopes in the boardroom at Disney? Or zebras? Who knows—but Jimmy Kimmel is back on air again, and that tells us something about the power of unsubscribing. What next? How about Russia’s new routine violations of NATO airspace in Europe, or Benjamin Netanyahu’s shake-up at the Shin Bet, or Trump at the UN, or the indictment of James Comey… It’s a packed agenda as contributing editor Daniela Vancic (of Democracy International) joins Omri and Benni for another round of firefighting. Listen, share, subscribe! Want to get in touch? Email us at tttpodmin at proton dot me. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
This monologue doubles as a book review of a book that doubles as a weather forecast.Confusing? In Deaf Republic (2019) by Ilya Kaminsky, deafness becomes an act of collective resistance after a deaf boy is murdered by a soldier at a puppet show. It’s a book of some 60 poems that show us how love, tenderness and laughter can manifest as resistance, defiance, and insurgency.This is not poetry for leisure. This is poetry for when the streets fill with sirens.This is an instruction manual for surviving cruelty while staying human.And we desperately need it. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
In this episode of This Time Tomorrow, Omri and Benni are joined by political scientist Angelos Chryssogelos to discuss the global rise of populism. From Donald Trump to Nigel Farage, from Yanis Varoufakis to Wolfgang Schäuble, from Brexit to Covid-19, from Viktor Orbán back to Trump again, the guys explore how populist movements distort our relationship with truth and facts, dismantle liberal democratic institutions, and destabilise the rules-based order… …all while asking this rather crucial question: what can we do about it? And how do we know when we’ve passed a point of no return?Tune in. Get involved. (Subscribe, leave a review!)Angelos Chryssogelos is a Reader in Politics and International Relations at London Metropolitan University, with a PhD from the European University Institute in Florence. His research specialises in international relations and foreign policy, particularly the global dimensions of populism and European politics. He has held fellowships at institutions such as LSE’s Hellenic Observatory, Harvard, SAIS-Johns Hopkins, and the Robert Schuman Centre. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
In this episode of This Time Tomorrow, Omri and Benni are joined by political scientist Angelos Chryssogelos to discuss the global rise of populism. From Donald Trump to Nigel Farage, from Yanis Varoufakis to Wolfgang Schäuble, from Brexit to Covid-19, from Viktor Orbán back to Trump again, the guys explore how populist movements distort our relationship with truth and facts, dismantle liberal democratic institutions, and destabilise the rules-based order… …all while asking this rather crucial question: what can we do about it? And how do we know when we’ve passed a point of no return?Tune in. Get involved. (Subscribe, leave a review!)Angelos Chryssogelos is a Reader in Politics and International Relations at London Metropolitan University, with a PhD from the European University Institute in Florence. His research specialises in international relations and foreign policy, particularly the global dimensions of populism and European politics. He has held fellowships at institutions such as LSE’s Hellenic Observatory, Harvard, SAIS-Johns Hopkins, and the Robert Schuman Centre. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
“For the vast majority of people, life is unlikely to get better in the next five years. If you belong to that group of people, then you already know that. Unfortunately, that’s not the worst of it.The worst of it is that unless something changes, then life is also likely to get a lot more violent. And not just other people’s lives. Yours as well.Do I want you to be afraid? No. But perhaps we should be.”In his fourth Monologue for Democracy, Ted riffs on an old poem by W.B. Yeats, while contending that far-right ideas once seen as fringe have entered the political mainstream, reshaping culture and policy across the West.As extremists push the limits of acceptability, centrists weaken, and violence becomes an increasingly plausible outcome.History warns us that collapse is not inevitable, but silence and apathy make it more likely. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
Democracy is not just elections, says Andreas Poléo in this monologue for democracy. It is about you. You have privilege. You see injustice. You feel anger. You see corruption. Change is hard. Even when you try, nothing moves. And yet you must take responsibility. Live with intention. Act on your values. Society wants you passive. They want you obedient. But you can choose. You can wake up. You can live. Start now.Andreas Poléo is a Norwegian former municipal politician and a This Time Tomorrow contributing editor. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
Political campaigns are not what they used to be.Once it was about speeches, tabloids, and TV spots. Now it is behavioural experiments, voter modelling, and psychological targeting happening quietly behind the scenes. This is not just campaigning. It is science for sole purpose of securing power. It’s Moneyball applied to the War Room. Sacha Issenberg called it the Victory Lab — the conceptual space in which strategists test what makes you act, click, donate, and vote. But the question today is bigger. What was revolutionary back when Barack Obama was winning landslides has become… basic. So how do you rebuild that lab in an era of changing media, AI persuasion, and voters who know they are being played?In this episode of This Time Tomorrow, Omri and Benni chat to Sacha to find out what comes after the Victory Lab and what it means for the future of democracy……and honestly, the answer might surprise you. Are we returning to the café?Sacha Issenberg is a journalist and author known for his reporting on politics, business, and culture, including The Victory Lab, which revealed how data and behavioural science transformed modern campaigning. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
Where do we even start with this one?The thing about the constitutional collapse in the US is that it’s unfolding before our very eyes, on our screens, all of the time. It’s not a single event. It is an ongoing erosion playing out in public view. This is not your everyday partisan struggle. So let’s call it what it is. From the January 6th Capitol insurrection to repeated threats of government shutdown to challenging the legitimacy of the Supreme Court… … from executive and judicial overreach to crises of electoral legitimacy to constant brinkmanship…… this is what an authoritarian takeover looks like. What can defenders of democracy learn from Trump 45 and 47? Because let’s be clear: European democracies, too, face institutional strains, and the warning signs from across the pound are not subtle...Join Omri, Benjamin and Daniela as they seek to understand what the US experience teaches Europe today. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
Where do we even start with this one?The thing about the constitutional collapse in the US is that it’s unfolding before our very eyes, on our screens, all of the time. It’s not a single event. It is an ongoing erosion playing out in public view. This is not your everyday partisan struggle. So let’s call it what it is. From the January 6th Capitol insurrection to repeated threats of government shutdown to challenging the legitimacy of the Supreme Court… … from executive and judicial overreach to crises of electoral legitimacy to constant brinkmanship…… this is what an authoritarian takeover looks like. What can defenders of democracy learn from Trump 45 and 47? Because let’s be clear: European democracies, too, face institutional strains, and the warning signs from across the pound are not subtle...Join Omri, Benjamin and Daniela as they seek to understand what the US experience teaches Europe today. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
Bother! Benni’s gone holidaying… So what do we do? In the 21st episode of This Time Tomorrow, Omri calls Ted on his rotary dial phone (you’ll get it if you listen to the episode) to discuss media ethics in the era of Joe Rogan… and it’s all because of something BBC journalist Nick Robinson told The Guardian last month.As trust in traditional journalism crumbles and podcasts rise to fill the gap, a new media battle is underway… and this one may just be reshaping democracy itself. Are values-driven platforms holding power to account, or do they just feed polarisation? With unchallenged interviews, partisan narratives, and collapsing editorial norms, the line between informing and influencing is vanishing fast. Can modern media still serve the public good, or have they become tools for ideological warfare? Is This Time Tomorrow ’creepy’ and ’partisan’…? Whether yes or no, how do we know how to make the distinction?Join us as we debate whether media today can be partisan, popular, and still serve the democratic good. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
Is your car spying on you? Do you need a cloud subscription just to use your vacuum cleaner? Was your device built to be unrepairable?Sometimes, a political movement starts with a broken MacBook.In the 20th episode of This Time Tomorrow, Omri and Benni sit down with prominent Right to Repair advocate Louis Rossmann to unpack the growing fight for consumer rights. From locked-down electronics to invasive data collection, Louis highlights how manufacturers are redefining ownership… and what we can do to fight back.Tune in for our most explicit episode yet……and discover how real change can start with just one person, a soldering iron, and a genuine desire to stop manufacturers (and politicians who enable them) from screwing you over.Louis Rossmann is an independent electronics repair expert, YouTuber, and outspoken Right to Repair activist. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
A new kind of warfare is taking shape… and this one does not unfold in trenches or airspace, but in servers, software, and digital networks. In the 19th episode of This Time Tomorrow, Omri and Benni speak with Francesca Bosco about the emerging architecture of cyberpeace, and the silent battles already underway in cyberspace.What happens when a hospital is forced offline mid-surgery because of ransomware?What does it mean when a child's access to education is cut off by a nationwide cyber siege?How do democratic societies survive when disinformation spreads faster than truth, sparking real-world violence before facts can catch up?From state-sponsored attacks on civilian infrastructure to the weaponisation of social media and AI, the terrain of 21st-century conflict is rapidly evolving. Unlike traditional warfare, much of it remains invisible… until the damage is done.As we try to navigate this new era of geopolitical tension, how do we build resilient digital societies? What does peace look like when the battlefield is the internet?Let’s get nerdy.Francesca Bosco is a leading expert in cybercrime, international law, and digital security. With experience at the UN and in frontline cybersecurity initiatives, she brings urgent insight into the global efforts to prevent the next war. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
As the boundaries between law, politics, and public morality blur, a global pattern is beginning to emerge… one where legal transgressions no longer spell the end of political careers. In the 18th episode of This Time Tomorrow, Omri and Benni sit down with Prof. Dr. Franz-Alois Fischer to discuss the place where law meets democratic legitimacy.Why are electorates increasingly willing to overlook criminal convictions, indictments, and extremist affiliations in their political leaders? From the United States, where Donald Trump returned to power in 2024 despite facing multiple criminal convictions, to Israel, where Benjamin Netanyahu was reelected in 2022 while under indictment for corruption, this trend is reshaping political norms. In France, Marine Le Pen of the far-right Rassemblement National was recently convicted of embezzling EU funds, yet she and her party retain considerable support. In Germany, the far-right AfD has been officially designated an extremist organisation by the domestic intelligence service, raising the possibility of a future ban… to no discernible consequence in opinion polls.As democratic institutions come under pressure, what does the future hold for the rule of law in politics? And what can defenders of democracy do to protect legal systems that are meant to uphold and defend our very dignity as human beings? Prof. Dr. Franz-Alois Fischer is a German legal scholar, philosopher, and attorney known for his work on constitutional law, legal philosophy, and public education on democracy. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
As traditional party politics fray across Europe, Austria offers a revealing case study in democratic reinvention. Over the past three decades, political entrepreneurs have disrupted the status quo, giving rise to new movements that challenge the dominance of legacy parties. From Jörg Haider’s nationalist surge in the 1990s to the more recent ascent of the Greens and NEOS, Austrian politics has become a testing ground for innovation, polarisation, and renewal. At stake is not just who governs, but how democracy itself evolves in response to changing social and generational demands.In the 17th episode of This Time Tomorrow, Omri and Benni speak with Josef Lentsch, co-founder of NEOS and a leading advocate for political innovation. They discuss what it means to innovate democracy, why Austria became fertile ground for political entrepreneurship, and what lessons the rest of Europe can draw from its evolving political landscape. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thistimetomorrowpod.substack.com
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