On June 16th, 1858, then-senatorial candidate Abraham Lincoln warned that “A house divided against itself cannot stand.” Two years later, his prophecy would be...
This issue of our magazine examines the implications of living in a sociopolitical ecosystem that is filled with as much stagnation as there is change.
Within the pages of “The Farce Awakens,” our creators interrogate the role that comedy plays in our political discourse, policymaking, and collective perception of our leaders.
As part of the Fall 2022 Campus Poll series this semester, the Harvard Political Review seeks to understand the views of Harvard undergraduates on a variety of political topics, from campus politics to cultural issues to national policy.
Our forecast predicts that Republicans will narrowly control Congress after this midterm election. This is a break from the current Democrat-controlled Congress from 2020.
On the back of voters’ ballots this year are printed four questions — one proposed constitutional amendment, two initiative petitions, and one veto referendum — each of which could stand to change the landscape of state politics.