A possible chaotic presidential transition in 2024, where Biden should concentrate diplomatic efforts, and Salt Lake City’s COVID recovery.
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Brookings Brief

September 25, 2023

Train seen in Salt Lake City, Utah
One size doesn’t fit all for understanding downtown recovery
 

The COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on U.S. downtowns has been significant and challenging to respond to. Why have some downtowns recovered and not others? How can “recovery” be measured? To investigate, Tracy Hadden Loh looks at the outsized rebound of a particular city and shares data on foot traffic, office inventory, and housing in major downtowns.

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Joe Biden surrounded by other heads of state in the family photo of the NATO Summit in Vilnius
Biden should press Poland and the EU to make up
 

It is in Washington’s vital strategic interest that Warsaw, Berlin, Paris, and Brussels reconcile and work together in shaping Europe’s future security order—and this reconciliation is where the Biden administration should concentrate its diplomatic efforts, rather than focusing only on individual European countries, argue Sophia Besch and Tara Varma.

Read in Foreign Policy
Electoral college votes are brought in before House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Vice President Mike Pence on January 6, 2021
What if the electors in the Electoral College actually get to choose the president?
 

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states can legally bind their electors to vote for the winner of that state’s popular vote, but about 20 states have yet to do so. In the aftermath of the fake elector scheme that led to the indictments of former President Trump and dozens of his followers, Roy Neel outlines how a similar chaotic scenario could unfold in 2024.

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