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Anti-Monopoly
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19 January 2027
In a movement-defining book, the “godmother of the current moment of dissatisfaction with establishment politics” (The New York Times) tells the story of the rising anti-monopoly movement and charts a course to a democratic future
In a short, sharp political book, The Nation magazine’s “Anti-Monopolist” columnist and “a prophet of the resurgent left” (Franklin Foer) explains the battle between the forces of oligarchy and the rise of the new anti-monopoly movement. Using the stories of modern anti-monopoly heroes including Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan; grocer Anthony Pena, who turned his frustrations with big box stores into a new grocers movement; and Doha Mekki, a Sudanese immigrant who developed the first successful criminal wage-fixing case for the Department of Justice; Teachout explains how anti-monopoly cuts across traditional political lines and gives real teeth to economic populism.
Teachout, a scholar of the law of democracy and a politician whose run for governor of New York State shocked the political establishment, argues that monopoly is the architecture of private tyranny, and that breaking corporate power is essential to building a new democracy. From AI to agriculture, healthcare to energy, Americans understand that corporate concentration doesn’t just cause inequality; it organizes power. Anti-Monopoly gives that feeling a name, a history, and a way forward.
After a spate of books out of the Abundance movement arguing that we need to remove local democracy and focus on efficiency at scale, this book provides a sharp counterpoint.
Zephyr Teachout is an award-winning author, constitutional law professor, and a nationally renowned democracy and anti-corruption activist. The New York Times has called her “the godmother of the current moment of dissatisfaction with establishment politics.” In 2014 she ran against Andrew Cuomo for governor, shocking pundits by winning a third of the vote, and, in 2018, The New York Times endorsed her when she ran for attorney general. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The New York Review of Books, Foreign Affairs, and The Nation and has inspired legislation in states around the country. She is the author of Corruption in America, and Break ’Em Up and lives in Manhattan.