|
|
Democrats need a post-populist economics
By Will Marshall
President and Founder of PPI
For The Hill
It’s been 15 years since the 2008 financial meltdown plunged America into the Great Recession. Our economy has bounced back, but the populist fury the crisis ignited has yet to burn itself out.
It manifests itself on the far left and right as general hostility to big business and, more recently, to Big Tech in particular. Fortunately, the populists’ reckless drive to break up America’s most innovative and globally competitive enterprises seems to be sputtering.
|
|
|
New from the Experts
Michael Mandel, Vice President and Chief Economist: Focusing on the Correct Broadband Issues
⮕ PPI
Lindsay Mark Lewis, PPI's Executive Director: As inflation spiked, broadband is ‘the dog that didn’t bark’
⮕ Richmond Times-Dispatch
Markose Butler, Community Outreach and Training Director for the Center for New Liberalism: What Have Democrats Done for Black Voters? Quite A Lot, Actually…
⮕ Medium
Hundreds of business groups step up campaign to ease permitting for projects, ft. PPI
⮕ Washington Examiner
Trade Fact of the Week: “Total column ozone counts” are rising
⮕ PPI's Trade Fact of the Week
|
|
|
PPI marks Women's History Month with policy forum focusing on choice, privacy, and education
|
|
|
In honor of Women’s History Month, the Progressive Policy Institute hosted its first annual series of policy conversations, featuring a salon dinner and a comprehensive policy forum on Capitol Hill. The events focused on health care, workforce, privacy, content moderation, and education. The panels were moderated by PPI’s women policy experts and featured special guests Rep. Suzan DelBene and Kentucky Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman.
|
|
|
The salon dinner — moderated by PPI’s Director of Workforce Development Taylor Maag and featuring Kentucky Lieutenant Governor Jacqueline Coleman — focused on driving gender equity in today’s economy, bringing esteemed leaders in workforce development fields to discuss labor force participation, and persisting gender gaps in STEM and other in-demand pathways.
|
|
|
The policy forum hosted on Capitol Hill consisted of four panel conversations and kicked off with “A Mosaic Moment,” giving attendees the opportunity to network with PPI’s policy experts. PPI President Will Marshall provided opening remarks, and Mosaic Program Director Jasmine Stoughton highlighted how the Mosaic Project is changing the landscape for women in policy.
|
|
|
Radically Pragmatic:
The Affordable Care Act at 13: an Interview with former HHS Sec. Kathleen Sebelius
As we look back on the successes and challenges of the Affordable Care Act, the Progressive Policy Institute's Director of Health Care Erin Delaney sits down with former Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to reflect on the landmark passage of the ACA and the critical role it played in providing essential coverage to millions of Americans during the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
|
|
THE NEOLIBERAL PODCAST:
Is there a War on Cars? ft. Aaron Naparstek
Why is car culture so entrenched in so many places, and what can we do about it? And do we need a 'War on Cars' to try to make our cities less car dependent? Urbanist and activist Aaron Naparstek joins the podcast to discuss car culture, urbanism and why it's so important to push back against car culture.
|
|
|
The left can win and forge a new settlement – but only if it repairs the trust we have lost
By Claire Ainsely
Director of the Project on Center-Left Renewal
For The New Statesman
Britain could hardly have had a less trustworthy leader than Boris Johnson, and it is tempting to see untrustworthiness as an individual failing, one that can be rectified by a person of greater character. Having worked closely with him, I have no doubt Keir Starmer possesses the integrity that the office of prime minister demands. But a search for the ideal politician can only end in disappointment. And it misses the deep crisis of trust in modern democracies.
|
|
Staff Spotlight: Erin Delaney
Erin Delaney
Director of Health Care Policy
Erin Delaney is the Director of Health Care Policy at the Progressive Policy Institute. In this role, Erin focuses on analyzing and developing policy solutions that address high health care costs, coverage gaps, and that promote medical innovation and more efficient use of health care resources to improve health outcomes and to ensure all Americans have access to affordable health care.
Prior to joining PPI, Erin served as the Health Care Program Manager at Center Forward, where she promoted Center Forward’s health care advocacy and policy objectives. Her role there centered on building relationships and encouraging educational opportunities with Members of Congress and congressional staff, state-based policymakers, and other health care policy stakeholders. She also focused on legislative and third-party research and analysis.
Prior to joining Center Forward, she served as the Legislative Affairs Associate at America’s Essential Hospitals, where she conducted legislative research, oversaw the management of the association’s advocacy events and Congressional fly-ins, and facilitated the management of the association’s political action committee. Erin also previously worked for Senator Bob Casey (D-PA).
|
|
|
Don't Miss These PPI Reports
|
|
|
|
|
|
|