Recent Posts

  • How to avoid another 2020 election meltdown

    By Steven Hill, Salon, Nov. 27, 2020

    The U.S.’s embarrassing problems with something as basic as voter registration should serve as a wake-up call

    Throughout the 2020 U.S. presidential election, the ghosts of 2000, hanging chads and Bush v. Gore were rapping loudly at the door. 

    For many members of the American public, voting has become a confusing ritual, even if one does not take the latest twist into account — a president who refused to accept that he lost the election.…

  • Social Capitalism in Europe – What America Can Learn

    Interview with Steven Hill, You Don’t Have to Yell podcast, November 12, 2020

    What if the mission of America’s economic engine was to elevate the quality of life for all, as opposed to simply grow profits and GDP? Author and political reformer Steven Hill discusses how this has worked in Europe, and how the choice we make between a stronger safety net and economic growth is a false one.…

  • Can Facebook be Used to Steal an Election?

    By Steven Hill, Counterpunch, October 30, 2020

    What a year. The US has faced three unprecedented crises – the COVID pandemic, nationwide racial unrest, and now a bitterly contested presidential election. And there in the middle of all three is the Dark Trinity: Facebook, YouTube and Twitter.

    With nearly 3 billion users, Facebook is by far the largest publisher in the world of news and information.…

  • Now how do we reform the U.S. Supreme Court?

    By Steven Hill, Salon, October 27, 2020

    Other countries show many ways in which a nation can de-politicize nominations to its highest court

    The battle over the Supreme Court nomination of Amy Coney Barrett has put a key issue of U.S. politics with renewed vigor onto the national agenda: How to achieve a degree of bipartisan balance, as other countries such as Germany manage to do it?…

  • Latest Election Stunt Proves Uber and Lyft Are Their Own Worst Enemies

    By Steven Hill, Naked Capitalism, October 16, 2020

    Like so much about politics today, the debate around Uber and Lyft’s Proposition 22 in California has quickly become polarized. Simplistic media narratives like “Silicon Valley versus labor unions,” or Uber’s self-serving argument that its drivers prefer flexibility over security, leave voters confused and torn.…

  • The Red Mirage

    By Steven Hill, The Globalist, October 13, 2020

    What happens if Trump declares victory on election night, and tries to dispute any “late” uncounted ballots — both in the courts and in the free-for-all of public opinion?

    So imagine this Nightmare Scenario: With so many more Biden supporters voting by mail in a close election, it is likely President Trump will be ahead on election night, based on partial returns in a number of battleground states (a scenario that has been called “a red mirage”).…

  • Corona-fied: Employers are now spying on remote workers in their homes

    by Steven Hill, Salon, October 5, 2020

    Employers have begun using digital surveillance technology to increase control and maintain productivity

    The future of work is here, ushered in by a global pandemic. But is it turning employment into a Worker’s Paradise of working at home? Or more of a Big Brother panopticon?…

  • How to Avoid Banana Republic Elections

    By Steven Hill, Common Dreams, October 4, 2020

    However this election turns out, a bipartisan effort should be mounted to make voting more efficient and secure.

    Is the US about to hold another banana republic election? The ghosts of 2000, hanging chads and Bush v. Gore are rapping loudly at the door.…

  • Kamala Harris’s Uber Test

    by Steven Hill, American Prospect, August 19, 2020

    The vice-presidential nominee did little as a state and local prosecutor as Uber and Lyft rose to prominence. Now California wants to force drivers to be treated as employees, and Harris appears to be on board—for now.

    Family gatherings at Kamala Harris’s house are about to get a lot more interesting.…

  • The Challenges of the Post-Coronavirus Workforce

    By Steven Hill,  Hans Böckler Stiftung, July 6, 2020

    With millions of workers affected, the short-term shocks of the coronavirus pandemic have been unprecedented. But what will be the longer term impacts of new ways of working remotely or at-home? Will a more “distributed” workforce be a less unionized and less empowered workforce?

  • Amazon Workers Fight Back

    By Steven Hill,  Hans Böckler Stiftung, February 27, 2020

    This past holiday season, Amazon workers in the US, Germany and the EU gave CEO Jeff Bezos his worst Christmas present – a growing workers movement.

    The Christmas holiday in the United States is supposed to be a time of joy and celebration, a moment to honor values like sharing and charity.…

  • California needs more ‘social housing’ to solve crisis

    By Steven Hill, San Jose Mercury News and East Bay Times, January 26, 2020

    San Jose and Oakland are classic examples of a supply/demand market failure that SB 50 will not solve.

    The affordable housing crisis continues to humble California policymakers. Sen. Scott Wiener’s bill, SB 50, is the latest attempt, but it fails to recognize that a major reason for this crisis is not simply a lack of overall housing supply.…

  • Forget SB 50 — San Francisco needs a bold plan for social housing

    By Steven Hill, 48 Hills, January 9, 2020

    European cities show how more than half the housing stock can be taken out of the private market — and it works.

    State Senator Scott Wiener has reintroduced his housing bill, SB 50, which seeks to alleviate the housing crisis by forcing more density around transit corridors.…

  • Golf courses…or affordable housing?

    By Steven Hill, 48 Hills, Dec 17, 2019

    Just one of San Francisco’s five public courses, which consume 1.5 percent of the city’s land, could provide affordable housing for 10,000 people.

    Despite all the public concern over the affordable housing crisis, and an alphabet soup of ballot and bond measures in recent years intended to address it, San Francisco has achieved limited concrete results.…

  • A Blow Against “Bogus Self-Employment” And Gig Economy

    By Steven Hill,  Hans Böckler Stiftung, Dec 11, 2019

    A new pro-labor law in California closes worker misclassification loophole and inspires labor advocates around the world.

    Workers in California recently received a major boost with the passage of a landmark labor law. The state of California passed Assembly Bill 5 (abbreviated AB5), that requires most companies, including app-based companies like Uber and Lyft, to treat “independent contract” workers as employees.…

  • 21st century California workers need portable safety net

    By Steven Hill, San Jose Mercury News, July 18, 2019

    Allowing companies to eliminate worker benefits unleashes a race to the bottom

    As Uber and Lyft scramble to find a profitable business model, it’s not surprising that they are opposing California Assembly Bill AB5. If this law goes into effect, it would force them to treat their California drivers as employees rather than as so-called “independent contractors.”…

  • Beyond the valley of the gig economy

    Interview with Steven Hill, 48 Hills, July 10, 2019

    ‘Raw Deal’ author Steven Hill on Uber tech, the perils of the “Californian Ideology,” and the twilight of the elites.

    By Johnny Ray Huston

    The overarching theme of this year’s LaborFest is “Labor On the Edge: Dystopia or a Future for Workers.”…

  • Is Uber the Amazon — or the Enron — of the transportation industry?

    By Steven Hill, Medium, May 9, 2019

    Uber has been promoting itself in its pre-IPO roadshow as the “Amazon of transportation,” but the comparison is misleading. CEO Dara Khosrowshahi is cleverly positioning his company so that it appears as more than just a taxi-like ride-hailing business, highlighting itself as an online platform that can connect users to a number of transportation-related side businesses.…

  • Shared Responsibility: Better Than Single-Payer

    By Steven Hill, The American Interest, March 25, 2019

    Americans are going through another episodic bout of introspection regarding the nation’s floundering health care system. That volatility likely will increase as the 2020 presidential election season unfolds. At least six leading Democratic candidates for president are supporting a “Medicare for All” approach.…

  • Gov. Newsom’s California data dividend idea is a dead end

    By Steven Hill, San Jose Mercury News, March 7, 2019

    Plan won’t benefit consumers or give them the privacy protections they deserve

    Gov. Gavin Newsom recently proposed that consumers should “share in the wealth” generated from our data by companies like Facebook and Google. But his plan for a “data dividend” is the wrong approach.…

  • Should Big Tech Own Our Personal Data?

    By Steven Hill, Wired, February 13, 2019

    Personal data is increasingly a core part of our personhood. Which is why the “service for data” model is a devil’s bargain.

    Facebook, Twitter and Google seem to take turns making the wrong kinds of headlines. Last month it was Google’s turn. The company was fined $57 million by a French regulatory agency, the first time a large Silicon Valley company has been penalized for violating the European Union’s new privacy rules known as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).…

  • Should Big Tech own our personal data?

    By Steven Hill, Wired, February 13, 2019

    Or should consumers sell their data — receive a “data dividend”?

    FACEBOOK, TWITTER AND Google seem to take turns making the wrong kinds of headlines. Last month it was Google’s turn. The company was fined $57 million by a French regulatory agency, the first time a large Silicon Valley company has been penalized for violating the European Union’s new privacy rules known as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).…

  • Co-determination takes the spotlight in the US

    By Steven Hill, Hans Böckler Stiftung, February 12, 2019

    German-style codetermination gains ground in the US, pushed forward by presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren. Will Trump’s America take a page from Europe’s “social capitalism”?

    Over the past year in the United States, German-style codetermination has moved closer to center stage in the national debate over inequality and worker’s rights.…

  • WA Post: How to rein in Big Tech

    By Steven Hill, Washington Post, January 7, 2019

    Self-regulation by Internet-based companies clearly has not worked. The best way to harness our digital future is to use technology itself to apply established business principles for regulating Big Tech.

    Every month, new controversies emerge regarding Facebook, Google, Twitter and other Internet-based companies.…

  • Will Germany’s plan for AI make it a leader? Or will it divide Europe?

    By Steven Hill, Ethics of Algorithms-Bertelsmann Stiftung, November 16, 2018

    Why Germany needs to focus on AI that benefits humanity

    After a long period of planning and incubation, the German government recently agreed on its new strategy for Artificial Intelligence (AI) development. The plan certainly includes a number of forward-looking steps, but it is also deeply flawed, and for two reasons: First, like the EU’s AI plan, the German plan tries too hard to copy the Silicon Valley model, which neither the EU nor Germany can replicate.…