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Biden s popularity has left Republicans in a state of chaos.
They ve resorted to culture wars in an attempt to drum up relevancy, and are desperate enough to throw their own allies under the bus.
Expect a continuation of the shift to culture war battles from the right as they flounder about looking for a pitch to voters.
Eoin Higgins is a journalist based in New England.
This is an opinion column. The thoughts expressed are those of the author.
Joe Biden is a popular president and Republicans are losing their minds.
Biden, a 78-year-old moderate Democrat, has a job approval rating hovering around 60% of Americans. He s been buoyed by his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, a resurgent economy, and a sense earned or not from voters that the new president has a firmer hand on the tiller than his chaotic predecessor.
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In the last year, workers have called on their workplaces to address political issues like systemic racism.
The founders of Basecamp recently shut down political talk at work, which shows how little say employees have.
Businesses are structured like dictatorships, which disempowers workers, weakens democracy, and consolidates the power of bosses.
Robin Kaiser-Schatzlein writes about economic life in America.
This is an opinion column. The thoughts expressed are those of the author.
Over the last year, American workers have attempted to make their workplaces sites of social change and political discourse. Employees have fought for action, hoping the firms they work for will be agents in the fight against, among other things, systemic racism and harassment.