Mr. Kerry, after four years of slothful leadership, the American people may be ready for the quality that the Framers referred to as “energy in the executive.” That energy, of course, can’t be solely of your own making. Since the nation’s founding, the eras that have decisively advanced democratic purposes have been built around a […]
Special Report
Labor — Inescapably!
Once upon a time — as in long, long ago — all presidents and presidential candidates were expected to have an answer for the “labor question.” Nowadays, not only are there no answers, there’s scarcely a question, at least not one demanding enough to command prolonged attention in this election year. Unasked, unanswerable, yet inescapable! […]
Know Thine Enemies
Since World War II, American foreign policy in general has been both realistic and moderate. There have been occasional bursts of intensified anxiety and paranoiac fears, but, by and large, American presidents–both the Democrats and Republicans who’ve been elected since 1948–have been able to maintain a steady course. Today, however, we are facing the first […]
The Courage to Lead
As president, John Kerry would inherit the most formidable grass-roots force in recent American history. Born in the rising populism of last year’s frenetic primaries, this force has generated its own cobblestone leadership. What will Kerry do with these exuberant leaders dispersed across country and city? What will they do with him? To hold this […]
The Breakfast Crowd
I have two words for our next president: no excuses. You will be facing an angry country frustrated by the serious challenges we confront and hungry for a leader who will actually get things done. I am from a small town in Maine, where I occasionally join in an early-morning breakfast with a few longtime […]
Build an “A” Team
My advice, President Kerry, is that you assemble a political “A” team, install it in the West Wing, and fight like hell against the right over the next four years. “We ought to have two real parties,” President Franklin Delano Roosevelt told speechwriter and adviser Sam Rosenman in 1942, “one liberal and the other conservative.” […]
From Bush’s Playbook
Given his lack of mandate, one might have expected moderation and caution from George W. Bush. Instead, Bush moved aggressively to reframe the basic dialogue of American politics and restructure the institutions of American government. What has Bush to teach John Kerry? Bush adhered consistently to three core principles: 1. Vision. Unlike his father, this […]
Be a Hero
The inauguration of President Kerry on January 20, 2005, will be the beginning of the global post-Bush era. As a young American, I would give President Kerry one central, and simple, piece of advice: Be a hero. His success at recasting the issues in a progressive light can only occur if he takes immediate hold […]
The Uneven Scales of Capital Justice
In 1972, the U.S. Supreme Court declared the death penalty unconstitutional. The Court found that because the capital-punishment laws gave sentencers virtually unbridled discretion in deciding whether or not to impose a death sentence, “The death sentence [was] disproportionately carried out on the poor, the Negro, and the members of unpopular groups.” In 1976, the […]


