Twenty-five years ago, Dēmos was founded on a simple but radical idea: that democracy and the economy should work for ...
From protesting outside a courthouse to shaping policy inside the White House, former Dēmos president Sabeel Rahman learned a ...
We need a society that ensures that every person who works receives a living wage and that they also have a genuine voice in ...
Former Dēmos president Heather McGhee reflects on how the organization grew from a small experiment in policy advocacy into ...
In his synthesis of Dēmos' Third Reconstruction series, Aron Goldman explains how each voice contributes to a bold and ambitious vision beyond the emergencies of today, helping us imagine and lay the ...
Millions of taxpayer dollars spent and thousands of voters disenfranchised—citizenship voting requirements are proving far more costly than predicted. New York, NY — Campaign Legal Center (CLC), Dēmos ...
A dangerous authoritarian shift is unfolding in real time. Dēmos President, Taifa Smith Butler, calls us to mobilize and act together to defend our democracy. The firing of Dr. McEntarfer crossed a ...
Instead of spending trillions to widen disparities, Congress could have made childcare more affordable, improved the nation’s crumbling housing stock, and created a much-overdue program for paid ...
The SAVE Act would gut third-party voter registration, a method more often used by Black and brown voters and other groups that have historically faced greater hurdles in voting. The SAVE Act’s threat ...
Discover how state and local policies can effectively protect workers' rights to organize and bargain collectively. This brief examines approaches to worker protection through federal funding ...
Emerging concerns about mass challenger data programs highlight that flawed data methodologies may put voters without stable housing at risk of having their registrations questioned or canceled.
Erosion of Chevron deference would be a massive win for corporations and the conservative legal movement, at the expense of the public interest. Federal agencies would have less power to enact ...
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