Right-wing radio broadcasters were a crucial, but now mostly forgotten, element of the Republican Party’s rise in the South.
George Hawley
If you want to cause real change in American politics, hitting the streets is one of your better choices.
Clint Watts argues that contemporary fears about Russia are well justified.
It is crucial to study who voted for Obama in 2012 and Trump four years later.
Our most bitter political disagreements are often more symbolic than substantive.
There is clearly a market for what has come to be called “Trumpism,” but there are no stable institutions pushing for it.
In his new memoir, Lee Edwards offers insight into the history of conservatism, but what he leaves unsaid about the movement matters as well.
A new book demonstrates the profound impact that the Christian Right, despite its many defeats, has had on American political life.
One of the thinkers Steve Bannon says he admires, Julius Evola, despised the United States and everything it stood for.
George Hawley is an associate professor of political science at the University of Alabama. He is the author of Making Sense of the Alt-Right (Columbia University Press, 2017).