Are You Safer Today?
June 2, 2004Please join the Center for American Progress for a major speech on homeland security with Congressman David Obey of Wisconsin. Representative Obey has played a major role in counterterrorism and homeland security oversight since the terrorist attacks against the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11th.
Faith and Progressive Policy
June 9, 2004The Center for American Progress is launching a multi-year project to support and amplify progressive religious voices, explore the vital role of faith in public life, and promote the religious freedom afforded by the separation of church and state.
A Combustible Mix
June 15, 2004The U.S.-Saudi strategic alliance is under fire from both sides and strained by a relationship characterized at once both by mutual reliance and mutual aversion. Saudi Arabia's influence on world oil supplies continues to cement its importance to the United States, while anti-Americanism and terrorism in the kingdom places the relationship on increasingly tenuous ground.
Are We Better Off?
June 16, 2004Please join the Center for American Progress and Mother Jones for a breakfast briefing on the startling results of the first-ever Mother Jones national poll.
The Key to Economic Progress for America's Working Families
June 25, 2004, 12:00am – 12:00amWhile profits are reaching record highs, the labor market recovery has been the worst since the Great Depression. Thus continues a trend towards greater economic inequality. In this environment, more than 42 million workers want to form unions to improve their lives. Please join Rep. George Miller (D-CA) for his keynote address.
Iraq After June 30
June 28, 2004The Center for American Progress will release "Iraq After June 30: A Strategy for Progress," a comprehensive and detailed plan for U.S. policy in Iraq. The report provides strategic guidance for the U.S. role in Iraq after June 30.
Civil Rights and the Church
June 29, 2004David Chappell, author of A Stone of Hope, will examine the different perspectives northern liberals and southern activists rooted in black churches had toward the civil rights movement.
