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On this week’s Mid-Atlantic, Roifield Brown convenes his transatlantic panel to examine two democracies straining under the weight of power, personality and public distrust. In Washington, President Trump’s State of the Union address is dissected less as governing document and more as performance art, heavy on self congratulation, generous with medals and applause lines, and sharply combative toward Democrats. The panel questions whether such rhetoric represents democratic resilience, institutions holding firm, or simply the normalization of political antagonism as spectacle.
Across the Atlantic, the arrest of Prince Andrew under investigation, alongside renewed scrutiny stemming from the Epstein files, pushes Britain into uncomfortable constitutional territory. Is this elite accountability finally catching up with power, or is it a carefully managed distancing exercise by an institution that has survived by cutting loose liabilities? The monarchy’s durability, its relationship to political neutrality, and the erosion of deference are all put under the microscope. Comparisons with the United States are unavoidable, particularly the appetite, or lack thereof, for holding powerful figures to account.
The conversation then turns to the Gorton and Denton by election, a contest that feels bigger than its geography. With Labour, Reform and the Greens in a tight race, the panel debates whether Britain is entering a period of structural political realignment. Is Reform’s ascent a populist vindication or a short term protest vehicle? Can the Greens convert authenticity and digital savvy into sustained influence? And are the Conservatives facing something more existential than a bad polling cycle? On both sides of the Atlantic, the episode leaves listeners with a bracing question, are these systems bending or quietly being remade?
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Roifield Brown4.8
6363 ratings
On this week’s Mid-Atlantic, Roifield Brown convenes his transatlantic panel to examine two democracies straining under the weight of power, personality and public distrust. In Washington, President Trump’s State of the Union address is dissected less as governing document and more as performance art, heavy on self congratulation, generous with medals and applause lines, and sharply combative toward Democrats. The panel questions whether such rhetoric represents democratic resilience, institutions holding firm, or simply the normalization of political antagonism as spectacle.
Across the Atlantic, the arrest of Prince Andrew under investigation, alongside renewed scrutiny stemming from the Epstein files, pushes Britain into uncomfortable constitutional territory. Is this elite accountability finally catching up with power, or is it a carefully managed distancing exercise by an institution that has survived by cutting loose liabilities? The monarchy’s durability, its relationship to political neutrality, and the erosion of deference are all put under the microscope. Comparisons with the United States are unavoidable, particularly the appetite, or lack thereof, for holding powerful figures to account.
The conversation then turns to the Gorton and Denton by election, a contest that feels bigger than its geography. With Labour, Reform and the Greens in a tight race, the panel debates whether Britain is entering a period of structural political realignment. Is Reform’s ascent a populist vindication or a short term protest vehicle? Can the Greens convert authenticity and digital savvy into sustained influence? And are the Conservatives facing something more existential than a bad polling cycle? On both sides of the Atlantic, the episode leaves listeners with a bracing question, are these systems bending or quietly being remade?
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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