Friday, January 15 at 12:00 p.m. ET join us for Crisis: Harrowing Presidential Transitions
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Brennan Center LIVE | Crisis: Harrowing Presidential Transitions from Lincoln to Biden | Livestreaming on January 15 from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. (ET) | | | The peaceful transfer of power, a bedrock condition of democracy, came under assault as insurrectionists heeding President Trump’s call disrupted Congress’s affirmation of the Electoral College. The turmoil only added to an already rocky transition: President-Elect Biden’s team says that the Trump administration has interfered with its access to government agencies, a situation that could hamper the new president’s ability to manage national security, public health, and a battered economy. Meanwhile, many Republican members of Congress have refused to acknowledge the legitimacy of Biden’s win, stoking public doubts about the election’s legitimacy. | While these circumstances are unique, the nation has experienced fraught transitions before — perhaps none more so than when Southern states met Lincoln’s election with secession. A distinguished panel of historians and journalists discusses why the transition period is so crucial and what Biden can learn from history. | This event is produced in partnership with the Center for Brooklyn History at Brooklyn Public Library and New York University's John Brademas Center. | Speakers: Jonathan Alter, Author, The Defining Moment: FDR's Hundred Days and the Triumph of Hope and His Very Best: Jimmy Carter, a Life Hon. Donna F. Edwards, Columnist, The Washington Post; Former Congressional Representative (D-MD, 2008–2017) Ted Widmer, Author, Lincoln on the Verge: Thirteen Days to Washington Moderator: Michael Waldman, President, Brennan Center for Justice | |
Brennan Center LIVE | The Rise and Fall of the Death Penalty | Livestreaming on January 14 from 12 p.m. to 12:45 p.m (ET) | | | With every passing year, the United States’ continuing practice of capital punishment leaves the country more and more of an outlier on the world stage. The nationwide decline in executions in recent years only highlights the arbitrary nature of those that are still carried out, an injustice heightened by the racism inherent to the system. Marshall Project staff writer Maurice Chammah, in his new book Let the Lord Sort Them: The Rise and Fall of the Death Penalty, takes a close look at the constellation of people involved in capital punishment in Texas, long the country’s leader in executions. In doing so, he casts a critical eye on the death penalty in the United States and on mass incarceration, of which it is an especially iniquitous part. | Speakers: Maurice Chammah, Staff Writer, The Marshall Project; Author, Let the Lord Sort Them: The Rise and Fall of the Death Penalty Taryn A. Merkl, Senior Counsel, Brennan Center’s Justice Program and Law Enforcement Leaders to Reduce Crime & Incarceration | |
ALERT: This is a sponsored message and is not an endorsement or reflection of our editorial policy; nor does it determine the content of The New Republic in any way. We depend on advertisers like this to help fund our independent journalism. Thank you for your support. | |
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