
Show overview
GD POLITICS launched in 2025 and has put out 125 episodes in the time since. That works out to roughly 85 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 24 min and 55 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language News show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 2 days ago, with 47 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Galen Druke.
From the publisher
Making sense of politics and the world with curiosity, rigor, and a sense of humor. www.gdpolitics.com
Latest Episodes
View all 125 episodesWhat The Early 2026 Midterm Forecasts Say
How Do Democrats Solve A Problem Like Graham Platner?
Why Right-Wing Populism Hasn’t Taken Off In Ireland
Is Iowa The New Maine For Democrats?
Sexts, Autopsies, and Primary Chaos
The Dollar’s Strange, Fragile Power
How Partisan Is The Supreme Court, Really?
Trump, The Lame Duck With Teeth
Trump Hits A New Low
Live: Hot Takes, Warped Maps, and Nerd Trivia
Can Public Health Win Back The Public?
How Prediction Markets Made The World A Casino
The Senate Map Has A Maine Character
Where The Gerrymandering Fight Goes From Here
A Year Of Carney In The Age Of Trump
Hot Politicians, Deaths In Office, And The Nebraska Senate Race
The Gerrymandering Fight Comes To Virginia And Florida
AI Has Officially Entered Mainstream Politics
What The Iran War Has Done To The Economy

Trump Declares Victory. Voters Send A Different Message.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.gdpolitics.comThe full episode is available to paid subscribers. Once you become a paid subscriber, you can connect your account to your preferred podcast player here.Where do we begin? Tuesday gave us plenty of election results worth digging into. In Georgia’s 14th Congressional District, Democrats turned in their biggest overperformance in a special House election since 2024, in the race to replace Marjorie Taylor Greene. Republicans still won, but by a margin 25 points more Democratic than the district’s baseline.And then there was Wisconsin, where the liberal candidate for the state Supreme Court won by — checks notes — 20 points. Twenty points, in a statewide race, in the consummate swing state. There are caveats, which we’ll get into, but taken together, it’s an unnerving picture for Republicans.Speaking of unnerving pictures, this is our first episode since President Trump threatened to kill “a whole civilization” early Tuesday and then, by day’s end, agreed to a ceasefire with Iran. We recorded this Wednesday afternoon, when a lot was still in flux, so some of the details may have changed by the time you hear this.At the moment, even the contours of the ceasefire are murky. Is the Strait of Hormuz actually open? Is an end to Israel’s invasion of Lebanon part of the deal? Have strikes in the Gulf really stopped? And that’s before you get to the longer-term problem: the American and Iranian visions for any lasting agreement still seem fundamentally incompatible.Politically, incompatible narratives are emerging too. The White House is claiming victory over a severely diminished Iranian military. But the regime is still in place, Iran still has its enriched uranium, and it now appears to have a say — and even a financial stake — in who passes through the Strait of Hormuz.Also on the docket today: the election this Sunday in Hungary and a “Good Data, Bad Data or Not Data” question on polling showing Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger floundering in approval polls after winning by 15 points last fall.With me to talk about all of it are Mary Radcliffe, head of research at FiftyPlusOne, and Lenny Bronner, senior data scientist at The Washington Post.