The map looks familiar, but the ground beneath it is moving. We open from Singapore with a hard look at an off-year election that punches above its weight: governors’ races that signal voter appetite for moderation and a California ballot push that could reshape congressional math. From there, we trace the long arc from Dixiecrats to today’s polarized blocs to show why the fight over district lines is less about party trivia and more about who gets heard when budgets and benefits are decided....
All content for The Greenfield Report with Henry R. Greenfield is the property of Henry R. Greenfield and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The map looks familiar, but the ground beneath it is moving. We open from Singapore with a hard look at an off-year election that punches above its weight: governors’ races that signal voter appetite for moderation and a California ballot push that could reshape congressional math. From there, we trace the long arc from Dixiecrats to today’s polarized blocs to show why the fight over district lines is less about party trivia and more about who gets heard when budgets and benefits are decided....
The geopolitical tide is shifting beneath our feet, and most Western nations seem content to look the other way. Henry R. Greenfield delivers a blistering assessment of Europe's inadequate response to the Ukraine crisis, contrasting their "solidarity forever" rhetoric with a troubling pattern of inaction and excessive vacation culture. Drawing on his 50 years of experience across 10 countries, Greenfield exposes the hypocrisy behind the recent World War II victory parade in Beijing, where th...
The Greenfield Report with Henry R. Greenfield
The map looks familiar, but the ground beneath it is moving. We open from Singapore with a hard look at an off-year election that punches above its weight: governors’ races that signal voter appetite for moderation and a California ballot push that could reshape congressional math. From there, we trace the long arc from Dixiecrats to today’s polarized blocs to show why the fight over district lines is less about party trivia and more about who gets heard when budgets and benefits are decided....