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  • Election integrity is continually eroding as Republicans lock in systematic disenfranchisement, unimpeded by corrupt and ineffectual corporate Democrats. Only labor mobilization, writes C.M. Lewis, can rise to the scale of the threat.

  • Shane Burley reflects on the Capitol insurrection and the federal investigation’s reliance on the public.

  • “If anything, Levon Manzie seemed to campaign harder after he died.” Ryan Zickgraf reports from Mobile, AL with the story of an attempt to elect a deceased councilman: a racist plot to make the largely Black city majority-white.

  • McKenna Schueler reports from St. Petersburg, FL, where socialist and DSA member Richie Floyd has been elected to City Council—a heartening win for a campaign that emphasized the needs of working people.

  • In West Virginia and elsewhere, governments are offering up grants and tax incentives to attract well-paid remote workers and mitigate “rural brain drain.” This, writes Jake Maynard, is nothing more than another elitist trickle-down charade.

  • Lobato Felizola reports from Brazil: Bolsonaro and agribusiness are pushing bills in Congress to further legalize the destruction of the Amazon. This system of fraud and rampant exploitation is incentivized by U.S. corporations.

  • C.M. Lewis examines the context and significance of India Walton’s historic win in the Buffalo mayoral primary. Years of neoliberal “revitalization” and naked cash grabs have set the stage for a spectacular socialist reprisal.

  • Protean publisher Steven Monacelli managed to infiltrate a Dallas QAnon convention. He found that not only did it resemble a particularly warped evangelical religious revival, but also that the movement continues to come alarmingly close to actual power.

  • Shane Burley writes with an analysis of the long-brewing forces on the far right that led to the Capitol incursion, exploring how the event indicates a potential for continued violence.

  • by Jonah Goldman Kay. Louisiana residents often depend on mutual aid to help rebuild communities after devastating hurricanes. But in a deeply conservative region, it often comes as a surprise to residents that this kind of aid might also be coming from socialists.