The race to be Germany’s 9th chancellor, what Virginia’s next governor will have to face, and haphazard travel bans during the pandemic.
The international travel restrictions make little sense “No one would claim that the freedom to travel is the most important right to preserve at the height of a pandemic. But if we convince ourselves that excluding the ‘unsafe’ is easier than defeating the virus, we won’t just be reducing frivolous trips in the short term. We will be fundamentally altering our world for the worse,” argues Thomas Wright in his latest op-ed. Read in The Atlantic | The housing challenges Virginia’s next governor will have to face Well-functioning housing markets are critical to Virginia’s economic success, but communities across the commonwealth are struggling. Jenny Schuetz writes that strategic housing policy by Virginia’s next governor can strengthen the state’s economy, reduce financial stress on households, and improve climate resilience. Read more | The race to be Germany’s 9th chancellor With the fate of their own country and ramifications for Europe on their shoulders, Germans are heading to the polls next month for their federal elections. Constanze Stelzenmüller describes some of Germany’s greatest chancellors and concludes that, in comparison, all three candidates vying to replace Chancellor Angela Merkel seem “eminently resistible.” Read more |
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