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You are here: Home1 / Articles2 / Urban Affairs

LA Fires Extinguished Gavin Newsom’s Presidential Dream

January 28, 2025/in Urban Affairs

Two years ago Gavin Newsom was widely seen as a rising Democratic star and likely future presidential candidate. Meanwhile Donald Trump, facing massive legal troubles and the results of his own intemperance, seemed to many, like those at CNN, a fading figure.

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https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/newsom-walks-trump-to-mc1.jpg 750 1200 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2025-01-28 07:35:562025-01-27 09:39:52LA Fires Extinguished Gavin Newsom’s Presidential Dream

Even Hollywood is Turning on Mayor Karen Bass

January 20, 2025/in Urban Affairs

After her election as mayor of Los Angeles in 2022, Karen Bass was a heroine of California’s Left. A former backer of Fidel Castro, she decisively defeated billionaire businessman Rick Caruso, who spent more than $100 million to try and defeat her. Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/mayor-bass-w-lafd.jpg 675 1200 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2025-01-20 07:25:462025-01-19 16:51:08Even Hollywood is Turning on Mayor Karen Bass

The Great Dumbing Down of American Education

January 17, 2025/in Politics, Urban Affairs

America’s universities may be a disgrace, but the deeper problems with our education system lie with grades K-12. Higher education still ranks as a U.S. strength that other countries might admire—but our grade schools might even be inadequate for poor, developing countries.

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https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/education-system-failing-students.jpg 675 1200 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2025-01-17 07:25:072025-01-16 17:44:46The Great Dumbing Down of American Education

LA’s Dreams Went Up in Flames

January 11, 2025/in California, Urban Affairs

The fire still engulfing large swaths of Los Angeles has done more than destroy homes, businesses, and livelihoods. It has scorched the whole dream of Los Angeles, part of a downward spiral unfolding for a generation — and cast into severe doubt the city’s ability to host the 2028 Olympics.

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https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/LA-dreams-up-in-flames.jpg 675 1200 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2025-01-11 07:08:402025-01-10 13:17:25LA’s Dreams Went Up in Flames

The Battle of the Oligarchs

January 6, 2025/in Urban Affairs

Money and power have rarely been strangers; often nations are made to shudder when the ruling elites battle each other. Britain’s late empire was divided between liberal manufacturers and aristocratic interests, whose conflicts hastened the rise of the Labour Party and the end of empire. In the United States, opposition to powerful trusts defined progressive politics for decades, ultimately laying the basis for the New Deal and a greater scope for government.

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https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/battle-of-oligarchs.jpeg 675 1200 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2025-01-06 07:25:492024-12-31 13:19:11The Battle of the Oligarchs

The Tide is Turning Against Green Elites

November 19, 2024/in Urban Affairs

It is the global climate-change conference that no one cares about. The latest United Nations (UN) ‘conference of the parties’, otherwise known as COP29, is currently being hosted in oil-rich, authoritarian Azerbaijan. Not many political heavy-hitters have decided to attend but assorted elites, grifters and media have attended hoping it will bring them more financial manna from heaven.

The late-19th-century US political wire-puller Mark Hanna once quipped: ‘There are two things that are important in politics. The first is money and I can’t remember what the second one is.’ Billions, potentially trillions, have been sunk into green projects enriching the already wealthy and their nonprofits, in what outgoing US treasury secretary Janet Yellen has proclaimed the greatest business opportunity of the 21st century.

Hopefully, Yellen didn’t put all her financial eggs in the green basket. The election of Donald Trump as US president only adds to the current woes of the climate industry. The wind-energy sector is increasingly beleaguered and huge numbers of climate start-ups are failing. Despite receiving billions in subsidies, green companies are recording big losses, declaring bankruptcy or avoiding new projects – even in China. Yellen’s opportunity of the century is becoming its most obvious bust, with little apparent impact on the climate.

Of course, the green industry will keep going, as long as there are funds to subsidise it. The alliance between big corporate interests and activist bureaucracies has created what political scientist Bjorn Lomborg has labelled the ‘climate-industrial complex’. As energy analyst Robert Bryce points out, parts of Wall Street have been ‘feeding at the trough’ and will lobby Trump and Congress to keep some of their goodies. At the same time, some deep-blue states, like California and New York, are girding themselves by issuing their own green regulations to replace those that might have come from DC.

The only major country set to benefit from the ‘energy transition’ is China, which continues to spew more greenhouse gases than all advanced countries combined. It is using efficient, cheaper fossil fuels to dominate the solar-panel industry, building its battery capacity to roughly four times the size of America’s while exercising effective control of rare-earth minerals and the technology for processing them.

All this leaves the rest of the world, notably Europe and the UK, embracing a Net Zero strategy that is fundamentally unfeasible without imposing massive costs on the middle and working classes. One particularly dubious aspect of Europe’s all-electric policy lies in the energy grid. According to the Financial Times, UK businesses are already having problems getting extra juice. EVs, which are projected to double the demand for electricity by 2040, will only increase the pressure on the UK’s grid. The Labour government is already looking to ban the use of home chargers during peak hours.

The working classes in Western nations have particular reason for concern. In the UK, the path to lower emissions has been driven by deindustrialisation. The manufacturing sectors’ share of GDP has dropped by 50 per cent since 1990, at the cost of several million jobs. This parallels a two-thirds drop in the UK’s domestic energy production. It now increasingly depends on energy imports from the Middle East and other unstable regions.

Read the rest of this piece at Spiked.


Joel Kotkin is the author of The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class. He is the Roger Hobbs Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University and and directs the Center for Demographics and Policy there. He is Senior Research Fellow at the Civitas Institute at the University of Texas in Austin. Learn more at joelkotkin.com and follow him on Twitter @joelkotkin.

Homepage photo: Berardo62 via via Flickr, under CC BY-SA 2.0.

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Offshore_oil_rig.jpg 1071 1600 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2024-11-19 07:37:122024-11-18 10:43:38The Tide is Turning Against Green Elites

America’s Future Lies in the South

November 2, 2024/in Religion, Urban Affairs

Every morning, just as the sun rises, Charleston Harbor hosts a scene of stirring patriotism. There, in the courtyard of Fort Sumter, tourists raise a huge American flag, helped along by a National Park Service ranger. And why not? This, after all, is where the Civil War started more than 160 years ago, and those gigantic Stars and Stripes, 20 feet by 35, confirm the North’s final victory over slavery and the rebs.

Yet if the South was crushed back in 1865, it now holds America’s destiny in its hands. Certainly, that’s clear enough politically: Donald Trump is expected to win every former Confederate state, with erstwhile battlegrounds such as Georgia and North Carolina now tilting to the Republicans. Even Virginia, increasingly dominated by liberal Washington suburbs, could go red too. It’s a similar story at the local level. Except for Richmond, the GOP controls every state house beyond the Mason-Dixon Line. In South Carolina’s General Assembly, the Republicans hold more than twice as many seats as the Democrats.

And if the South is now crucial to the country’s immediate electoral future, broader demographic trends are on its side too. Based on the last census, Texas gained two seats, while Florida and North Carolina each gained one. Accompanied by losses in places such as New York and California, the South is rapidly becoming the most powerful region in the land. Add to that its burgeoning economic strength, and it could soon be more influential than it has been for generations — a shift likely to transform politics, and political culture, right across the nation.

Through the 18th century, the South was central to the American economy. Charleston, an epicentre of the slave trade, was the most prosperous town south of Philadelphia, while South Carolina was among the richest colonial provinces. That wealth allowed the region’s white population to be the wealthiest of the pre-revolutionary era; and self-proclaimed cotton kings to become Old World aristocrats in the swamps and plantations of the New. Stroll the streets of Charleston and you can still see this legacy today. There are elegant mansions, decorated with art, and with silverware imported from Britain. Yet somewhere nearby, their slaves huddled in windowless rooms, forced to suffer the heat and humidity of the South in chains.

It’s ironic that the war the rebels started at Fort Sumter would ultimately destroy the South. That shot heard around the world, courtesy of the Charleston militia in April 1861, would prove no match for the emerging industrial might of the free states in the North. Under blockade from the vastly superior US Navy, buoyant cities like Charleston, Savannah and New Orleans all shrivelled, as the cotton routes to England slammed shut. In 1865, Charleston fell, alongside Fort Sumter. Columbia, the state capital, was razed.

Not that things would improve once the guns fell silent. The Civil War left the South in deplorable shape, becoming in the memorable words of one author the “problem child” of America. Deprived of their slaves, the cotton kings were ruined. Meanwhile many normal Southerners, particularly after Reconstruction, worshipped the memory of the Confederacy while embracing its racist ideology. Across the South, Confederate memorials dotted the landscape; as recently as a few decades ago, Stars and Bars flags were common. All the while, Southerners worshipped Robert E. Lee and the “lost cause” while the beneficiaries of Ulysses S. Grant’s victory dominated the country’s economy, cultural and political life from New England to Oregon.

Read the rest of this piece at Unherd.


Joel Kotkin is the author of The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class. He is the Roger Hobbs Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University and and directs the Center for Demographics and Policy there. He is Senior Research Fellow at the Civitas Institute at the University of Texas in Austin. Learn more at joelkotkin.com and follow him on Twitter @joelkotkin.

Homepage photo: Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge, looking across the bay towards Charleston, SC, via Flickr under CC 4.0 License.

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Ravenel_Bridge_night-Charleston-SC.jpg 675 1200 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2024-11-02 07:26:452024-11-01 09:26:55America’s Future Lies in the South

The New Revolutionary Class

October 30, 2024/in Urban Affairs

No power on earth is more fearsome than a highly educated class that faces a constrained, even dismal, future. Such people have played a role in revolutionary upheavals in Europe, Russia, and Latin America—and could potentially do so here in the United States.

The key to radical agitation lies in what one Marxist scholar described as “the swelling population of college graduates caught in a vise of low-paying jobs.” Modern activism rarely stems from blue-collar workers. Instead, it mostly comes from the alienated-educated class, which emerged in its contemporary form with the Occupy Wall Street movement.

The key lies in the disjunction between those who consider themselves enlightened and fit to lead, as defined by tests and degrees, and the less-educated classes that work hard, innovate, and take risks. The educated class has expanded globally as college enrollment has exploded—which grew almost 80% between 1970 and 2010—even as job opportunities for many of that class have declined.

The New Angry Class

What has been referred to as “the educated underclass” can be seen not only in America but in Canada, in almost all European countries, and, most particularly, in China. Once seen as a land of future possibilities, the Middle Kingdom now suffers from a looming property, demographic, and overall economic crisis, with young educated people, as opposed to skilled blue-collar workers in particular, left with distressingly few opportunities.

Given this trajectory in virtually every high-income country, Pew has found that the vast majority of parents—80% in Japan and over 70% in the U.S.—are pessimistic about the financial future of their offspring. It’s no surprise then that less than 10% of Americans under 30 think the country is headed in a good direction.

This generation has a reason to be upset. Collectively, the older generation has left them an almost unfathomable $91 trillion debt load. In many countries, including the U.S., Australia, Canada, and the U.K., homeownership rates among the young are far lower than in the past. In contrast, in the U.S. a fifth of Boomers own half of the $32 trillion in home equity. In Britain, one in four Boomers is a millionaire, mainly due to inflated housing prices. British retirees have more income than working-age people, notes a recent Resolution Foundation survey.

To make matters worse, Millennials face a world where many good jobs are disappearing while they have to cope with high rents and exorbitant tuitions. In the U.S., some 40% of recent graduates are underemployed, working in jobs where their college credentials are essentially worthless. In the U.K., roughly a third doubt they will reach their career goals. Close to half of American adults under 30 still live with their parents. Across Europe and the U.K., large proportions of young workers are neither in work nor school.

Read the rest of this piece at American Mind.


Joel Kotkin is the author of The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class. He is the Roger Hobbs Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University and and directs the Center for Demographics and Policy there. He is Senior Research Fellow at the Civitas Institute at the University of Texas in Austin. Learn more at joelkotkin.com and follow him on Twitter @joelkotkin.

Homepage illustration: Adam Shrugged, via Deviant Art under CC 3.0 License.

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/is_he_hiring_by_adamshrugged.jpg 675 1200 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2024-10-30 07:25:392024-10-28 10:04:14The New Revolutionary Class

The West Faces a New Type of Housing Crisis

October 25, 2024/in Urban Affairs

Throughout the West, particularly the Anglosphere, housing costs are ravaging the middle class. Home ownership, long the key to social mobility, is on the decline, particularly among younger generations and minorities. Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Ontario_CA_USA_-_panoramio_17.jpg 720 1280 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2024-10-25 07:17:492024-10-22 09:24:57The West Faces a New Type of Housing Crisis

How the City of Angels Went to Hell

October 21, 2024/in California, Urban Affairs

A journey through Los Angeles, the adopted home of Vice President Kamala Harris, offers a masterclass in urban dysfunction. Read more

https://joelkotkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/city-of-angels-decline.jpg 675 1200 Joel Kotkin /wp-content/uploads/2017/01/jkotkin_logo.png Joel Kotkin2024-10-21 07:09:092024-10-18 17:17:18How the City of Angels Went to Hell
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