The Conversation: Why America hasn’t become great again
As written in The Conversation Canada by Robert Chernomas, professor of ecomomics, Faculty of Arts.
United States President Donald Trump and his MAGA base are often portrayed as a break from past political norms. While that is certainly true, it overlooks the long and predictable path that led to his rise.
The slogan “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) became the movement’s rallying cry, tapping into a nostalgic vision of a past era of economic prosperity and social dominance and appealing to voters who feel left behind by demographic and economic change.
Trump is the predictable result of the deteriorating economic conditions in the U.S. since the 1980s and the political machinations that brought those economic conditions about. In our recent book Why America Didn’t Become Great Again, we explore how the U.S. has set itself on a path toward self-destruction.
Read the full article in The Conversation.
UM PhD graduate and postdoctoral fellow Nitesh Sanghai finds purpose and family in ALS research.
Respiratory therapy researcher Dr. Mayson Sousa aims to reduce the risk of ventilator-induced lung injury.
Joel Nichols [BFA Hons '23] — the UM's 100th Rhodes Scholar — has won the Young Artist Award in London.
Falling Walls Lab Manitoba 2026 celebrates innovation, partnership and community