You are here: Home
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Search
sl-03.jpg

Harold Meyerson

L.A.'s Red

WHEN THE POSITION OF CHAIRMAN of the Los Angeles Communist Party came open in the late 1940s, the two obvious candidates were Dorothy Healey, then the party's organizational secretary, and Ben Dobbs, the party's labor secretary. Both were smart and affable and had charisma to burn. They were also the best of friends, so - as Dorothy related the story in California Red, her quasi-autobiography cowritten with historian Maurice Isserman - they flipped a coin and it came up on the Dorothy-becomes-chairman side.

Read More

 

The Greatest Good for the Smallest Number

IF THE REPUBLICAN CONGRESS HAS a guiding principle, it must be that the government that governs least governs worst.

Read More

 

Democratic Elites Rethink

HERE IN WASHINGTON, Democrats are engaged in a frenzy of rethinking. Two new magazines have been unveiled this week (in one of which - full disclosure here - I wrote a piece on the nonexistence of Democratic policy toward offshoring in the age of globalization). Major conferences abound. Think tanks are adding staff. To be sure, much of the rethinking amounts to reaffirming support for old ideas that are still good and necessary (such as raising the minimum wage) or to stating a problem for which Democrats don't yet have a solution (such as offshoring in the age of globalization, for which, in fairness, no political tendency in the world has a solution). But even if all this activity amounts to no more than what Kant would have called a Prolegomenon To All Future Democratic Rethinking, it has, at least, reached fever pitch.

Read More

 

Downwardly Mo

LIKE ANY MAJOR METROPOLIS, Los Angeles has its normal sea of troubles, but there are two fundamental problems that really define the city and the challenges it confronts. The first, with which the Weekly has dealt extensively of late, is the quality of its air. The second, which may be even harder to fix, is the quality of its economy. Over the past quarter century, Los Angeles has been downwardly mobile, with its middle class shrinking to a fraction of its former size. Both these problems - air quality and, even more, the vanishing middle - afflict the nation generally. But Los Angeles has opened such a wide lead on every other city that we're not just quantitatively different; we're qualitatively in a class by ourselves.

Read More

 
Page 57 of 57

Harold Meyerson Named One of Nation’s Top 50 Columnists!

awardIn September, 2009 Atlantic Monthly named Harold Meyerson one of 50 Most Influential Columnists. Calling its list “its all-star team,” Atlantic Monthly’s Top 50 are the most influential commentators in the nation – the columnists and bloggers and broadcast pundits who shape the national debates. Harold Meyerson is honored to be in their midst.

To get a complete list of the country’s Top 50 Idea-meisters, click here.

Harold Meyerson's Book

Harold Meyerson's Book
Who Put the Rainbow in the Wizard of Oz?
Yip Harburg, Lyricist

Find Out More!


Latest Videos

David Sirota's new book, "Hostile Takeover"

JavaScript is disabled!
To display this content, you need a JavaScript capable browser.


Latest Podcasts

Listen to Harold Meyerson every other week on Jon Weiner’s 4 O’clock Show on KPFK and KCRW

  • Wed 1/7, 4pm: Gaza... and Washington


  • Wed. 12/10, 4pm: Corruption in Chicago

More Podcasts