If human rights and a free press are fundamental values in the West, what obligations does it have to ensure the Khashoggi affair does not squelch voices of dissent across the Arab world, as many fear?
鈥淲hat鈥檚 wrong with democracy?鈥 is a common question these days. We鈥檝e asked it ourselves. No matter your political bent, there鈥檚 a fear that politics has become so polarized that democracy might be broken.
Two Stanford University professors, however, have a different take: Perhaps democracy is doing exactly what is needed. In , David Brady and Bruce Cain note how different the America of today is from the America of 30 years ago. Back then, American voters leaned strongly Democratic; now they鈥檙e split fairly evenly among Democrats, Republicans, and independents.
Equally important, the parties of today are a hot mess. What鈥檚 the Republican position on trade? The Democratic position on free college tuition? On an array of issues, the two parties have no unified idea who they are.
American voters have been radically reshaped by trends of globalization, immigration, religion, and race. The parties are only now starting to catch up and evolve. And historically, when America鈥檚 parties have been in flux, the country goes through a period of four-wheel-drive politics, the authors say. 聽聽
鈥淒emocracies cannot and should not resist change,鈥 they add. 鈥淭hey need to enable it to proceed freely and fairly. That鈥檚 what our party coalitions do. And it seems to be what they are doing now, in their usual messy and uneasy ways.鈥
Now to our five stories for your Wednesday.