Saturday, June 13, 2026

EPS-002 - European Position Statement - Israeli Settlement Expansion

 


European Position Statements (EPS)

About the EPS Framework

European Position Statements apply the principles of the European Declaration for Middle East Stability to specific actors, policies and events.

Their purpose is not to determine who is right or wrong.

Their purpose is to evaluate whether developments move the region toward or away from long-term stability.

To do so, EPS uses the Declaration Compass:

Future
Does a policy contribute to a viable future for all peoples involved?

Security
Does a policy contribute to security that can ultimately be shared rather than permanently contested?

Reconciliation
Does a policy help transform historical grievance into coexistence and cooperation?

The Compass does not prescribe a final political settlement.
It provides a direction against which policies and developments can be evaluated.

The ultimate objective is a Middle East in which political entities increasingly conform to the principles of the European Declaration for Middle East Stability and where peace becomes possible because enough people feel that their history has been acknowledged and incorporated into a shared future.


EPS-002 - Europe’s Position on Israeli Settlement Expansion

A Proposed European Position Statement

 

Scope of this Position Statement

EPS-001 evaluated an actor: Iran.
EPS-002 evaluates a policy: Israeli settlement expansion.
That distinction matters.

This statement is not an assessment of Israel as a state. Previous Declaration assessments suggested that Israel possesses strong institutional foundations and remains substantially compatible with the principles of the European Declaration for Middle East Stability.

The question here is narrower:
Does Israeli settlement expansion move the region toward or away from the direction identified by the Declaration Compass?


European Objective

Europe seeks a stable Middle East in which Israelis and Palestinians can pursue security, dignity and self-determination without permanently denying those same goods to one another.

Europe recognizes Israel as a legitimate political entity with real security concerns.
Europe also recognizes that Palestinian self-determination remains unresolved.

European policy should therefore oppose developments that make a viable future for both peoples harder to achieve.

Israeli settlement expansion is one such development.

The EU has repeatedly reaffirmed its commitment to a comprehensive, just and lasting peace based on a two-state solution in line with relevant UN Security Council resolutions. UN Security Council Resolution 2334 states that Israeli settlements in Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, including East Jerusalem, have no legal validity and constitute a violation under international law.


Compass Assessment

Future

Settlement expansion narrows the practical space within which a future political arrangement can emerge.

This does not mean Europe must already know the exact final structure of peace. The future may ultimately take the form of two states, confederal arrangements, shared institutions, or another configuration developed by the peoples themselves.
But every future arrangement requires space in which both national projects can remain politically viable.

Settlement expansion reduces that space.
It fragments territory, deepens mistrust, and strengthens the perception that Palestinian self-determination is being progressively closed off.

Compass Assessment: Negative.

Settlement expansion moves away from a viable future for both peoples.


Security

Supporters of settlement expansion often present it as a security measure.
At local or tactical level, some settlement patterns may be defended as buffers or strategic depth.

But the Declaration Compass asks a broader question: Does this policy contribute to security that can ultimately be shared?
On that test, settlement expansion performs poorly.

It may strengthen some immediate Israeli security positions, but it also increases friction, fuels grievance, encourages radicalization and weakens confidence that political resolution remains possible.

The result is not reciprocal security.
It is security for one side that increasingly appears to depend upon the permanent insecurity of the other.

Compass Assessment: Mixed to Negative.

Settlement expansion may be defended in tactical security terms, but it undermines the conditions for durable mutual security.


Reconciliation

Reconciliation requires both peoples to believe that their history and future are being seen.

Settlement expansion sends the opposite message to many Palestinians. It suggests that their land, political future and national horizon are being steadily reduced.
Whether framed as ideology, security policy or domestic politics, the effect is similar. It makes it harder for Palestinians to believe that coexistence remains available. It also strengthens maximalist narratives that claim negotiation cannot work.

For Israelis, settlement expansion may appear as continuity, security or national attachment.
For Palestinians, it is widely experienced as encroachment.
A policy that deepens this gap moves away from reconciliation.

Compass Assessment: Negative.

Settlement expansion makes historical grievance harder to transform into coexistence.


European Position Statement

Europe should continue to oppose Israeli settlement expansion clearly and consistently.
But Europe’s argument should not be only legal. It should also be strategic.

Settlement expansion is not merely a violation of international law. It is a policy that moves the region away from the direction required for durable peace. It narrows the space for a future for both peoples. It weakens the possibility of shared security. It makes reconciliation more difficult.

Europe should therefore connect its opposition to settlement expansion directly to its broader objective: preserving the possibility of a political relationship in which Israeli and Palestinian futures can develop together.

European diplomacy should support:

·       a freeze on settlement expansion;

·       stronger opposition to settler violence;

·       protection of Palestinian civilian life and property;

·       preservation of territorial and institutional space for Palestinian self-determination;

·       political initiatives that keep future coexistence possible.

Recent Western sanctions targeting settler violence and settlement-linked networks show that policy tools are increasingly available when political will exists.


Compass Conclusion

The Compass assessment does not constitute a judgment on Israel as a state.
It is an assessment of a specific policy.

Israel may remain a legitimate and institutionally compatible regional actor while still pursuing policies that move the region away from the Declaration’s direction.

Israeli settlement expansion is such a policy. It weakens the future. It complicates security. It obstructs reconciliation.

Europe should therefore oppose settlement expansion not only because international law demands it, but because the European Declaration Compass shows that it moves Israelis and Palestinians away from the relationship required for durable peace.

EPS-001 - European Position Statement - Iran and Middle East Stability


 

European Position Statements (EPS)

About the EPS Framework

European Position Statements apply the principles of the European Declaration for Middle East Stability to specific actors, policies and events.

Their purpose is not to determine who is right or wrong. Their purpose is to evaluate whether developments move the region toward or away from long-term stability.

To do so, EPS uses the Declaration Compass:

Future
Does a policy contribute to a viable future for all peoples involved?

Security
Does a policy contribute to security that can ultimately be shared rather than permanently contested?

Reconciliation
Does a policy help transform historical grievance into coexistence and cooperation?

The Compass does not prescribe a final political settlement.
It provides a direction against which policies and developments can be evaluated.

The ultimate objective is a Middle East in which political entities increasingly conform to the principles of the European Declaration for Middle East Stability and where peace becomes possible because enough people feel that their history has been acknowledged and incorporated into a shared future.


EPS-001 - Iran and Middle East Stability

A Proposed European Position Statement

European Objective

Europe seeks a stable Middle East in which all peoples can pursue prosperity, security and self-determination without threatening the security and self-determination of others.

Europe recognizes that Iran is a major regional actor whose participation will be necessary for any durable regional security architecture.

Europe therefore seeks neither permanent confrontation with Iran nor the acceptance of policies that perpetuate regional conflict.

Europe’s objective is to encourage developments that align Iranian policies more closely with a future of regional stability, reciprocal security and eventual reconciliation.


Compass Assessment

Future

Iran consistently highlights the unresolved status of the Palestinian question.

Europe recognizes that Palestinian self-determination remains an essential component of any durable regional settlement. In this respect, Iran addresses a genuine and unresolved issue that cannot simply be ignored.

At the same time, support for Palestinian aspirations contributes to long-term stability only if it helps create a future in which both Palestinians and Israelis can live in security and dignity.
Policies that frame the conflict primarily in terms of victory, resistance or elimination do not provide such a future.

Europe therefore distinguishes between support for Palestinian rights and support for approaches that undermine the possibility of coexistence.

Compass Assessment: Mixed.

Iran raises legitimate questions concerning Palestinian aspirations but does not yet consistently align its policies with a future that accommodates both peoples.


Security

Iran possesses legitimate security interests and faces genuine security concerns of its own.

Europe recognizes Iran’s sovereignty, territorial integrity and right to self-defense.
At the same time, the pursuit of security through prolonged regional confrontation creates insecurity for all parties involved.
Support for military actors whose objectives are incompatible with coexistence undermines the emergence of a durable regional security framework.

Europe therefore encourages a gradual shift from deterrence through confrontation toward security through diplomacy, regional arrangements and confidence-building measures.

Compass Assessment: Mixed to Negative.

Iran’s security concerns are legitimate, but several instruments used to pursue them contribute to regional instability.


Reconciliation

The Middle East contains numerous unresolved historical grievances.
These include Palestinian dispossession, repeated wars, terrorism, foreign interventions, occupation, displacement and civilian suffering across multiple societies.

Europe believes that acknowledging these histories is necessary.
However, acknowledgement should serve reconciliation rather than perpetual mobilization.

Iran’s political discourse frequently emphasizes historical injustice. Less developed is a corresponding vision of how historical grievances can ultimately be transformed into coexistence.

Europe therefore encourages Iran to complement its advocacy for Palestinian rights with support for political arrangements capable of accommodating both Palestinian and Israeli futures.

Compass Assessment: Negative.

Current Iranian policy places greater emphasis on grievance and resistance than on reconciliation.


European Position Statement

Europe does not ask Iran to abandon support for Palestinian dignity, rights or self-determination.

Europe asks Iran to increasingly align that support with a regional future in which Palestinian and Israeli futures can coexist.

Europe believes that durable stability will not emerge through the permanent exclusion of Iran from regional affairs. Nor will it emerge through the permanent exclusion of Israel.

The challenge is not choosing between the security and aspirations of one people or another.
The challenge is constructing a regional framework in which these aspirations can increasingly develop together.

Europe therefore pursues dialogue with Iran while maintaining clear opposition to policies that undermine coexistence, reciprocal security and reconciliation.


Compass Summary

Iran occupies a paradoxical position within the Middle East.
It raises legitimate concerns regarding unresolved Palestinian aspirations and regional inequities.
At the same time, aspects of its current strategy contribute to the continuation of the very conflict it seeks to address.

The Declaration Compass suggests that Europe should neither isolate Iran nor align with its current regional approach.
Instead, Europe should seek to encourage an evolution from resistance toward coexistence, from confrontation toward reciprocal security, and from grievance toward reconciliation.

Such a course would not resolve the conflict overnight. But it would move the region in the direction indicated by the European Declaration for Middle East Stability.

 

The Road Not Taken in 1948

 



The Road Not Taken in 1948

 Completing What Was Left Unfinished


In a previous article [1], a European Declaration for Middle East Stability was proposed based on a simple observation: Peace requires more than security.
Military superiority can deter. Ceasefires can pause violence. Agreements can temporarily reduce tensions.
But durable peace becomes possible only when enough people feel that their history has been seen, acknowledged, and incorporated into a shared future.

That raises an obvious question.

Can the principles from this European Declaration for Middle East Stability help illuminate a practical path through the Israeli - Palestinian conflict?

To explore that question, the Declaration was applied to four cases:

·       Israel at independence in 1948,

·       Israel today,

·       the Palestinian Authority,

·       maximalist anti-Israel movements.

The summary assessment results are provided in the appendix to this article.
The results revealed a pattern that may be more important than any individual assessment.

A Clear Pattern

The same unresolved tensions identified in 1948 remain visible today.
The actors have changed. The political circumstances have changed. The military balance has changed.

The Declaration based assessments interpret the conflict not being fundamentally sustained by the existence of Israeli national aspirations. Nor is it fundamentally sustained by the existence of Palestinian national aspirations. Both peoples possess legitimate aspirations for self-government, security and dignity. Yet the underlying challenges remain remarkably familiar where the original deficiencies persist.

  • The future of one people remains difficult to reconcile with the future of the other.
  • Security is often pursued through deterrence rather than mutual security.
  • Historical narratives remain contested rather than incorporated into a shared future.

The conflict is thus less a dispute over existence and more a dispute over an incomplete settlement.
That observation leads to a different question from the one usually asked.
Not: Who was right in 1948? Nor: Who was wrong?
But: What was left unfinished?

What Was Left Unfinished?

The assessments point toward a conclusion that:
The central challenge is not Jewish self-determination. Nor is it Palestinian self-determination.

The challenge is the absence of a framework in which both can develop together.
The road taken in 1948 successfully secured Jewish self-determination and safety. That achievement should not be dismissed. 

However, with a framework missing, no creation of security could result that could be shared by both peoples. 

Something important was achieved. Something important remained unfinished.

The Road Not Taken

When discussions return to 1948, they often become trapped in arguments about legitimacy. Should Israel have been created? Should Palestine have been created? Which side possessed the stronger claim?

The road not taken was not simply a different border.
It was about agreeing a framework to establish relationships.
A relationship in which Jewish and Palestinian national aspirations advanced together rather than separately.
A relationship in which security increasingly became mutual rather than unilateral.
A relationship in which historical narratives were acknowledged without being allowed to permanently determine the future.

It may have been politically impossible in 1948. History rarely presents ideal choices. But the absence  remains visible today. The same unresolved tensions that appeared at the beginning of the conflict continue to shape it nearly eight decades later.

From European Declaration to European Compass

The aim of the Declaration was not to provide a detailed peace plan.
Its value instead is from creating 
a compass.
A means of evaluating whether developments are moving toward durable peace or away from it.
Not to direct to the destination but to show the correct direction.

The compass just asks three simple questions:

  • Does a proposal help both peoples build a viable future?
  • Does it improve security for both peoples?
  • Does it help transform historical grievance into coexistence?

If the answer to all three questions is no, durable peace is unlikely to emerge.
If the answer to all three questions is yes, progress may be occurring even when disagreements remain.

The compass does not eliminate political choices. But it helps distinguish between movement and stagnation.

Summary: Where The Road Can Begin

The purpose of the proposed European Declaration for Middle East Stability was not to prescribe a final political arrangement. The future political form of the region remains for its peoples to determine. But the Declaration does allow us to identify directions.

The Declaration based assessments show that the central challenge is not Jewish self-determination. Nor is it Palestinian self-determination.

The road taken in 1948 successfully secured Jewish self-determination and safety.

The road not taken would have embedded these achievements within a broader framework that offered both peoples a future, both peoples security, and both peoples a path beyond the grievances of history.

The challenge is building a framework in which both can develop relationships together—a relationship based on reciprocal self-determination, reciprocal security and reconciliation.

Europe cannot impose such a relationship. But Europe can use its diplomacy, partnerships and influence to encourage progress in that direction.

The Declaration provides an European Compass. That is where the road can begin.


References

[1] A European Declaration for Middle East Stability
https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/06/a-european-declaration-for-middle-east.html


Appendix: Assessments results

Entity

Principal Strengths

Principal Deficiencies

Israel 1948

Jewish self-determination, security

Reciprocal self-determination, reciprocal security, reconciliation

Israel 2026

Statehood, institutions, minority participation, security

Reciprocal security, reconciliation, unresolved Palestinian self-determination

Palestinian Authority

Palestinian self-determination claim, political representation

Governance, security, coexistence

Maximalist Anti-Israel Movements

Resistance narrative mobilization

Reconciliation, coexistence, reciprocal security

 Key Observation

The same unresolved elements repeatedly appear across the assessments.

 

Friday, June 12, 2026

A European Declaration for Middle East Stability

 

A European Declaration for Middle East Stability

Peace Requires More Than Security

In a recent article [1], I argued that Europe should not outsource its Middle East strategy to Washington and Tehran.
Europe’s interests in the region are too significant. Europe’s economic exposure is too great. And Europe’s diplomatic potential is too valuable to remain dependent upon negotiations over which it exercises little influence.

But if Europe is to develop its own Middle East strategy, a more fundamental question follows. What principles should guide it?

For decades, the Middle East has been the subject of countless peace initiatives, conferences, road maps, agreements and diplomatic efforts.
Most have focused on familiar ingredients: military deterrence, ceasefires, borders, security arrangements, economic incentives, etc.

Yet the region continues to experience recurring cycles of conflict. This should lead us to an uncomfortable question. What if security alone is insufficient to create peace?

The European Experience

Europe’s own history offers an important clue.

The Second World War ended in 1945. Peace did not emerge because Germany and France suddenly trusted one another. Nor did it emerge because historical grievances disappeared. Peace emerged because a process began through which former enemies gradually developed a shared future.

The same can be said, in different ways, about reconciliation efforts in Northern Ireland, the Balkans and elsewhere.

History was not erased. History was acknowledged. But history was also prevented from permanently determining the future.

This points toward an insight that may be relevant far beyond Europe.

Peace becomes possible when enough people feel that their history has been seen, acknowledged, and incorporated into a shared future.

Security Without Reconciliation

Many contemporary conflicts illustrate the limits of security-focused thinking. Military superiority may reduce threats. Deterrence may prevent escalation. Ceasefires may stop immediate violence.

But none of these automatically create legitimacy. None automatically create reconciliation. None automatically persuade people that they possess a meaningful future within a stable political order.

The result is often a recurring pattern. Violence decreases. Tensions remain. Grievances persist. Conflict returns.

The Middle East has experienced this cycle repeatedly.

Different actors propose different solutions.

Yet most continue to focus primarily on security arrangements rather than the deeper conditions that allow peace to endure.

A European Contribution

Europe cannot impose peace upon the Middle East. Nor should it attempt to do so.
But Europe can contribute something distinctive.
America’s comparative advantage is military power.
Europe’s comparative advantage may increasingly be its experience with reconciliation, integration and the transformation of historical rivalries into political cooperation.

This does not mean Europe’s history is perfect. Far from it.
European powers themselves were among the historical actors that helped shape many of today’s Middle Eastern realities.

That history creates not only responsibility, but also an obligation to contribute constructively to their peaceful resolution.

If Europe wishes to develop an autonomous Middle East strategy, it should begin by clearly stating the principles it intends to apply consistently across all actors.

A Declaration for Middle East Stability

Such a declaration need not prescribe a final political map. It need not choose winners and losers. It need not dictate how peoples define their identities.

Instead, it should establish the principles by which Europe evaluates stability, legitimacy and progress toward peace.

Those principles reflect Fundamental European Values:

·       Equal human dignity for all peoples.

·       Equal rights to security and freedom from violence.

·       Respect for self-determination.

·       Respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity.

·       Protection of civilians.

·       Preference for political settlement over military dominance.

·       Recognition that lasting security must be reciprocal.

·       Commitment to regional cooperation and shared prosperity.

·       Consistent application of principles across all actors.

·       Recognition that historical harms continue to shape present conflicts.

·       Commitment to future-oriented reconciliation.

Together, these principles form something larger than a diplomatic position.

They form a framework for evaluating whether political arrangements are moving toward peace or away from it.

Europe’s Vision

Europe does not seek to impose a particular political arrangement upon the peoples of the Middle East.
Nor does Europe seek to determine how they define their identities, histories or aspirations.

Europe’s role is different.

Europe’s role is to support the emergence of a Middle East in which security, dignity, freedom and self-determination become reciprocal rather than competing goals.

A Middle East in which peoples do not need to deny one another’s history to secure their own future.
A Middle East in which historical wounds are acknowledged without being allowed to determine future generations.
A Middle East in which political arrangements increasingly conform to the principles of this Declaration.

Europe understands that such a future cannot be imposed.
It can only emerge gradually through reconciliation, cooperation and mutual security.

Peace becomes possible when enough people feel that their history has been seen, acknowledged, and incorporated into a shared future.

That is Europe’s vision for Middle East stability.

And then What?

Principles alone do not resolve conflicts.
The real test is whether they can help illuminate a practical path beyond one of the region's longest-running conflicts.

In the next article, I will apply this Declaration to the Israeli - Palestinian conflict and ask a different question from the one usually asked.
Not who was right. Not who was wrong.
But what was left unfinished in 1948 — and whether completing it could help point a way forward to a durable peace.

References

[1] Europe Needs Its Own Middle East Strategy

Europe should not outsource its Middle East strategy to Washington and Tehran.

https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/06/europe-needs-its-own-middle-east.html

 


Tuesday, June 9, 2026

The Path Beyond MAGA

 


The Path Beyond MAGA

The Missing Link in the Democratic Strategy Debate:
From Coalition Politics to National Purpose
America becomes great when Americans build it together

Over recent months, a series of articles examined why the Democratic Party continues to struggle despite possessing talented leaders, extensive fundraising networks, policy expertise, activist energy, and broad electoral opportunities.

The discussion began with strategy. It continued through political narratives, emotional hooks, confidence, and the limits of opposition politics. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Each article examined a different part of the puzzle.
Yet they all pointed toward the same conclusion. The Democratic Party's central challenge is not a lack of leaders, ideas, organizations, donors, activists, or policy proposals. It is the absence of a unifying frame capable of transforming a coalition of interests into a national majority.

Understanding why that matters requires beginning somewhere unexpected.

MAGA Identified a Real Problem

MAGA succeeded because it recognized something many Americans could already see.
America is not as strong, united, affordable, trusted, or confident as it should be.

Many political debates begin by arguing whether decline exists. Increasingly, that debate seems beside the point. Concerns about economic competitiveness, rising living costs, political polarization, institutional trust, public discourse, and national cohesion are now shared far beyond MAGA's supporters.

The more important question is not whether decline exists. The more important question is how a nation responds to it.

MAGA offered one answer.
America's problems, according to MAGA, were caused by elites who abandoned ordinary Americans. The solution was to defeat those elites, reverse their policies, and take America back.
That answer proved politically powerful. It reshaped the Republican Party and transformed American politics.

Yet many of the underlying concerns remain unsolved by MAGA politics.
America's fiscal position remains fragile. Living costs continue to challenge millions of households. Political polarization has deepened. Trust even lower. Public institutions are increasingly contested. The country remains deeply divided over what America is and where it should go.
Whatever MAGA's successes and failures, the broader promise of national renewal remains incomplete.

This raises a different question.
What if America's greatest challenge is not decline itself? What if America's greatest challenge is fragmentation?

The Democratic Party's Hidden Incapacity

From the perspective of a sympathetic European observer, one feature of contemporary American politics stands out.
The Democratic Party possesses leaders, activists, donors, think tanks, caucuses, policy experts, campaign professionals, and media platforms. Yet the party often struggles to produce three things that voters instinctively seek:
Leadership. Vision. Responsiveness.

This is not primarily an organizational problem. The organizational structures already exist. The deeper problem is the absence of a common frame capable of aligning them.

Looking at the Congressional Progressive Caucus, the New Democrat Coalition, and other Democratic organizations illustrate the point. These groups have offices, staff, policy agendas, communications operations, and public visibility.
What they do not yet share is a common answer to three foundational questions.
What is America's central problem? What emotional story explains that problem? What future is being offered?

These are the questions every successful political movement ultimately answers.
Ronald Reagan answered them.
Barack Obama answered them.
MAGA answered them.

Today's Democratic Party answers them in several different ways simultaneously.
That is why debates about leadership often miss the deeper issue. Leadership usually emerges from a compelling frame.
A compelling frame rarely emerges from a leadership search.

America Became a Coalition of Groups

One reason these questions remain difficult is that America itself has changed.
Increasingly, political life appears organized around competing groups, interests, identities, movements, donor networks, media ecosystems, and cultural tribes.
Everyone has learned how to defend a cause. Everyone has learned how to mobilize supporters. Everyone has learned how to oppose rivals.

Far fewer people appear focused on answering a simpler question:
What is the common American project?

This challenge extends beyond any single party. Conservatives experience it. Progressives experience it. Corporations, activists, media organizations, and political institutions all contribute to it.

The result is a society that often appears better at representing interests than pursuing common purpose.
Americans increasingly know what they oppose.
They are less certain about what they are building together.

Decline Is Not the Real Problem

Nations survive periods of decline. History is full of examples. Economic setbacks can be overcome. Political mistakes can be corrected. Institutions can be reformed.

The greater danger is fragmentation.

A nation begins to struggle when citizens no longer share a common understanding of what the nation is or what future they wish to create together.

Viewed from that perspective, America's greatest challenge may not be economic competition, public debt, technological rivalry, immigration, or political polarization individually. It may be the gradual erosion of a shared national purpose capable of containing all these debates.

This is where the paths diverge.
One response to decline is to identify internal enemies.
Another is to identify responsibilities.

One response seeks victory over rivals.
The other seeks renewal through common effort.

The Path Beyond MAGA

The search for a path beyond MAGA may not begin with finding a new candidate.
It may begin with finding a new national proposition.

One possibility is surprisingly simple.

America is weakening economically, institutionally, and socially in part because Americans increasingly experience politics as a contest between groups rather than participation in a shared national project.

If that diagnosis contains even part of the truth, then the solution is not the victory of one group over another.
The solution is rebuilding a common American purpose.
America becomes great when Americans build it together.
Not because disagreements disappear. Not because differences vanish. Not because every political conflict can be resolved.
But because successful nations ultimately depend on citizens believing they are participants in something larger than themselves.

What Building America Together Means

A common political frame is not a policy platform. It does not answer every question.
It helps determine which questions are asked.

Consider immigration.
The question becomes less whether one side can defeat the other in an ideological argument. The more important question becomes how many and how newcomers can successfully join the American story and how the nation remains strong enough to unite people from different backgrounds around a common purpose.

Consider identity.
The question becomes less which group deserves priority. The more important question becomes how every citizen can belong while sharing a common national identity.

Consider economic opportunity.
The question becomes less which constituency receives support. The more important question becomes how work, initiative, and innovation can once again lead to security, advancement, and confidence in the future.

Consider patriotism.
The question becomes less who owns the American flag. The more important question becomes how Americans can take pride in building and improving their country together.

Consider democracy itself.
The question becomes less how political opponents can be defeated. The more important question becomes how fierce political competition can coexist with a shared commitment to the republic.

These questions do not eliminate disagreement. Nor should they.
Democracy requires disagreement.
But successful democracies also require something else: a belief that political competitors remain participants in the same national project.

Rebuilding that belief may be one of the most important tasks of the coming decade.

A New American Dream

Perhaps the deepest challenge concerns the American Dream itself.

For many years, public debate has increasingly treated individual success and national purpose as competing ideas. They are not.
America's greatest achievements emerged when individual ambition and common purpose reinforced one another.

The interstate highways were not built by isolated individuals.
Nor were the great universities, scientific breakthroughs, military achievements, technological revolutions, or economic transformations that helped define modern America.

The American Dream was never simply about every person pursuing individual advantage.
At its best, it was a promise that citizens could pursue their own aspirations because they belonged to a society capable of creating opportunity.

The path beyond MAGA may ultimately require rediscovering that balance.
Not individualism without responsibility.
Not collectivism without freedom.
But citizens confident enough to pursue their own success while contributing to a larger national project.

Beyond Opposition

The path beyond MAGA is not a stronger anti-MAGA. It is a stronger America.
An America that chooses confidence over fear.
Honesty over grievance. Building over blaming. Common purpose over permanent division.

The most successful American political movements have always invited citizens to build, reform, expand, protect, renew, or improve the republic.
The next successful movement may need to do the same.
America will not become great because one group defeats another.

--- America becomes great when Americans build it together ---


REFERENCES

[1] Winning the Midterms Won’t Fix This: Why the Democratic Party Is Unprepared for the Future

https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/02/winning-midterms-wont-fix-this-why.html

 

[2] The Democratic Party Needs a Winning Strategy

https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-democratic-party-needs-winning.html

 

[3] The Emotional Architecture of Political Movements

https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-emotional-architecture-of-political.html

 

[4] The Missing Democratic Confidence

https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-missing-democratic-confidence.html

 

[5] Stop WhinINg, Start Organising

https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/05/stop-whing-start-organizing.html