AE Snow
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demofuturist.bsky.social
AE Snow
@demofuturist.bsky.social
Democratic Futurist.
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Thanks to Will Stancil for highlighting my piece in Renewal. If you’re interested I’ll be developing these themes further in my new Substack about democracy, technology and the future open.substack.com/pub/democrat...
The BBC is so much more than politics. The idea we should destroy a public institution and replace it with nothing ultimately advances the agenda of conservatives
November 12, 2025 at 12:46 PM
Reposted by AE Snow
Breaking the tax pledge is the right call...and politically sulphurous. Reeves must argue, far more forcefully, that taxes are *the* essential downpayment we all pay for a fairer society.

Patrick Diamond and I wrote for @renewaljournal.bsky.social. Key points in 🧵 👇

renewal.org.uk/blog/if-labo...
If Labour want a fairer society, they must argue for it
Labour must make the political argument: taxes are the critical downpayment we all pay to live in a fairer society.  It now seems all but certain that direct taxes will rise in the forthcoming Budget...
renewal.org.uk
November 10, 2025 at 7:34 AM
Reposted by AE Snow
A really interesting response to @demofuturist.bsky.social's essay in the latest edition of @renewaljournal.bsky.social
October 27, 2025 at 10:54 AM
Fantastically clear response on the negative feedback loops democracies can enter into and how things like compulsory voting can help.

Really looking forward to the full ep
Really enjoyed recording this discussion with David Runciman, covering threats to democracy, early 20thc theories of oligarchy, how algorithmic social media is changing politics, the problem with 19thc approaches to suffrage - and much, much more!
NEW EPISODE OUT NOW!

In today’s episode David & @dmk1793.bsky.social try to answer some of the hundreds of questions, comments and suggestions we have had about this series. How do we know if democracy is broken? Have we ever had a real democracy anyway?

Find us at...🎧 ppfideas.com
October 26, 2025 at 9:36 PM
Reposted by AE Snow
If you want to know which way the wind is blowing in Labour at any given moment, Wes Streeting’s statements tend to be a good indicator- but this is also testament to the “liberal Blairite” resurgence reported on by @morganj0nes.bsky.social:

www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk-...
October 26, 2025 at 1:54 PM
Required reading for social democrats today:

A speculative alternative to ideologies of Silicon Valley and the need for such an alternative to contest the here and now open.substack.com/pub/democrat...
October 25, 2025 at 1:17 PM
Reposted by AE Snow
This essay was prompted by an article in the latest issue of Renewal, which for anyone concerned by the threat of the far right in the UK, I would recommend reading from cover to cover. A brilliant issue @renewaljournal.bsky.social !
October 25, 2025 at 7:46 AM
Fascinating response to my essay on social democratic futurism. William argues that we have to contest the deferral of hope into the future by asking more of science and technology in the here and now.
October 25, 2025 at 12:46 PM
British politics is now just anti-immigration and the wealth tax.

Interesting isn’t it that neither of those issues are ones Labour have had any agency framing. Even if they don’t adopt the latter what is their challenge to it? Just getting crushed by both sides
Labour are just all in on the "concede the basic framing to Reform, argue that they are preferable within that framework" approach and in addition to thinking it is bad on merits I also sincerely think it is going to get them absolutely mullered at the polls.
“We welcome those who come to this country, legally, and give more than they take. We believe the right to stay here must not be automatic, but that those who play their part should be able to earn that right."
October 21, 2025 at 6:24 PM
A lot of people are convinced of the damage social media has done to the electorate. But I wonder if it is the politicians who have been most warped by it?

Every MP incentivised to be a little demagogue
October 21, 2025 at 11:30 AM
Reposted by AE Snow
Rigid, controlling, centralised institutions aren't going to cut it. We need dispersed power, ways of finding common ground and making the most of our disagreements.

Good piece on digital democracy.
October 21, 2025 at 9:33 AM
Reposted by AE Snow
Really enjoyed this - a useful counter-point my general techno-pessimism, offering a detailed example of how new technology can sometimes be used to improve rather than (as in most cases) wreck the democratic public sphere
New from me on what we can learn from the digital democracy of Taiwan. This is the story of how a civic movement of hackers and officials created the conditions for tech to serve democratic purposes. In an age where platforms drive us apart the best response is not only defensive but creative
The Taiwan Alternative: Democratic Renewal in the Digital Age
Why democracy's defenders should look beyond platform regulation
open.substack.com
October 21, 2025 at 12:24 AM
Nice to see my piece for Renewal get a little shoutout. I also particularly enjoyed @morganj0nes.bsky.social musings on Andrea Dworkin and the value of “vulgar” feminism
What David said.

I read @sachahilhorst.bsky.social and @demofuturist.bsky.social's pieces on a recent flight, alongside the excellent conversation between Jack Jeffery and Alan Finlayson on why the left doesn't understand the internet.

These three pieces alone worth the sub.
Patrick is absolutely right that Labour lacks a sufficient intellectual culture - but instead of reading race-war Whatsapp essays from anonymous crackheads, Labour MPs should subscribe to @renewaljournal.bsky.social for serious and informed strategic analysis and argument
October 20, 2025 at 6:22 PM
I think it’s clear now woke was pretty good for society in general. Willing to concede it was somewhat bad for art tho
October 20, 2025 at 5:37 PM
New from me on what we can learn from the digital democracy of Taiwan. This is the story of how a civic movement of hackers and officials created the conditions for tech to serve democratic purposes. In an age where platforms drive us apart the best response is not only defensive but creative
The Taiwan Alternative: Democratic Renewal in the Digital Age
Why democracy's defenders should look beyond platform regulation
open.substack.com
October 19, 2025 at 11:23 AM
Reposted by AE Snow
I've spent *weeks* working on this special report for @thenewworldmag.bsky.social on GB News co-owner Paul Marshall – and the astonishing, unprecedented influence network he's built on the UK's right. There's never been anything like it before. www.thenewworld.co.uk/james-ball-p...
Paul Marshall, the man who owns the right
The multimillionaire controls a network of news channels, publications and think tanks that the left could only dream of. If Reform or the Tories win the next election, he will become the country’s mo...
www.thenewworld.co.uk
October 15, 2025 at 8:03 AM
So the plan on week 1 of the Reform gov according to Cummings should be to trigger an immediate diplomatic, economic and security crisis by leaving the ECHR, breaching the Good Friday Agreement and the trade agreement with the EU.

This is their strategist dawg. Don’t tell me Reform can’t be beaten
October 14, 2025 at 2:47 PM
Following in Clegg’s footsteps, it is dispiriting that “prime minister” is now a stepping stone to “functionary at an American corporation.”

Embarrassing and revealing of how fallen in stature and lacking in vision our political class is
October 11, 2025 at 2:14 PM
Great article - for communitarians I guess my questions are who is the enemy? What is the controversy?

Right now the dominant story on the left is wealth tax and that is going to squeeze out any other “left” issue

If you want to tell another story you will have to raise its salience by a lot
In piece for @renewaljournal.bsky.social, I suggest Labour conference saw the emergence of two distinct approaches to practicing politics in a broken public sphere:
- YIMBYs and Growth Groupers pursue disruption
- "progressive communitarians" seek re-connection
October 11, 2025 at 1:50 PM
One of the great achievements of the post war settlement is to extend the arts, once the province of aristocrats, to most of us

But I’ve never been that convinced by the utilitarian argument that the arts make us better judges of morality
The reason the Right are so invested in the myth that the arts have no value isn’t because the arts don’t generate wealth (they do); it’s that studying the arts teaches people to imagine better ways of judging the value of an idea than by counting how much money it makes…
October 8, 2025 at 4:04 PM
Reposted by AE Snow
“If pictures of American troops in war zones overseas upset Trump voters, pictures of them 50 miles down the road are not going to do any better. When the culture war escalates into real-world street fighting, people rapidly lose their patience with it.” inews.co.uk/opinion/trum...
Trump the peacemaker abroad appears a warlord at home - his supporters don't want this
The President's voters put him into office to make their lives better, not to sink them into chaos
inews.co.uk
October 8, 2025 at 1:06 PM
Not going out of their way to alienate Labour voters really is the bare minimum for a recovery and also an admission that the previous strategy to do so was a total failure
October 2, 2025 at 3:24 PM
“Indeed, increasing the salience of your opponents’ core issues is a recipe that has repeatedly failed for mainstream parties in combating the far right”

Great piece. Hopefully conference is the start of learning this lesson
After Anthony Albanese appeared alongside Keir Starmer in Liverpool yesterday, re-posting one of my @prospectmagazine.co.uk pieces comparing the two.

They’re remarkably similar—except that one regained electoral ground, while the other is still losing it.
www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/world/asia/a...
What can Keir Starmer learn from Anthony Albanese?
After a listless first term, Australia’s prime minister has been re-elected with a landslide victory. Here’s how Starmer could do the same
www.prospectmagazine.co.uk
September 29, 2025 at 10:49 AM
Reposted by AE Snow
I was delighted to contribute to this excellent @uclpolicylab.bsky.social & @powertochange.org.uk essay collection on “Labour and the communitarian tradition”, alongside @ewallis.bsky.social, @mds49.bsky.social, @caitprowle.bsky.social, @kirstymcneill.bsky.social & @andyburnham.bsky.social
September 28, 2025 at 12:17 PM
Reposted by AE Snow
How should Labour respond to the radical right threat? Three essays make big strategic arguments:
- @caitprowle.bsky.social calls for Labour to go big on community politics
- @paulmason.bsky.social calls for a "zero-sum socialism"
- @demofuturist.bsky.social calls for a "social democratic futurism"
Volume 33, Issue 2
A quarterly journal of politics and ideas, committed to exploring and expanding the radical potential of social democracy.
renewal.org.uk
September 27, 2025 at 11:56 AM