


What America’s presidential election means for world trade
The first in a series of eight concise briefs on the consequences of the 2024 election
In the 1990s presidential hopefuls fought over how much America should open itself up to commerce with other countries. Nowadays, the trade debate revolves around how much America should close itself off. Donald Trump is unquestionably the more radical of the two candidates, with a vision for tariffs that would turn the clock back nearly a century on economic strategy. Kamala Harris is less extreme but still sees a world in which America is best served by soft protectionism, featuring subsidies for favoured industries.

Checks and Balance newsletter: gender politics in the election
Both parties are telling very different stories about gender

Many Americans can decide their own policies. What will they choose?
Three issues will dominate state ballot measures in November

Hurricane Helene was America’s deadliest storm in nearly two decades
It wiped out North Carolina’s mountain towns
Crypto bros v cat ladies: gender and the 2024 election
How the campaigns are exploiting and reshaping the battle of the sexes
A ports strike shows the stranglehold one union has on trade
East coast longshoremen are already among America’s best-paid manual workers
The vice-presidential debate was surprisingly cordial
Its high-minded tone worked to J.D. Vance’s advantage