Andrei Cherny is Founder and Co-Editor of Democracy: A Journal of Ideas, a quarterly journal of serious progressive thought that seeks to spur new ideas about the big challenges of the 21st century. Democracy – available in print and online – has a readership in every state and 90 countries around the world. Its ideas have made their way into the national political debate. The New York Times’ Maureen Dowd called it “a progressive journal to ponder big ideas that might help the wretched Democrats stop driving on Ambien and snatch back a little power.”

More information about Andrei Cherny can be found at www.andreicherny.com.

Cherny's new book, The Candy Bombers: The Untold Story of the Berlin Airlift and America's Finest Hour, will be published in spring 2008. It tells the story of how a small group of Americans, with few resources and against all expectations, fed half of one of the largest cities in the world by air for more than a year, thereby avoiding World War III, winning the hearts of our defeated enemies, and inspiring people around the world to believe in America's fundamental goodness.

Cherny has made his mark at the intersection of public policy, politics, and government. He has been called a “superstar” by CNN, a “progressive reformer” by Washington Monthly, one of the Democratic Party’s “top young thinkers” by the New York Times Magazine’s Matt Bai, “smart, bold, and thoughtful” by the Washington Post’s E.J. Dionne, and one of the “more creative thinkers” on the politics of the future by U.S. News and World Report’s Michael Barone.

Cherny has provided policy and strategy advice to John Kerry, Al Gore, Harry Reid, Cabinet members, Governors, United States Senators, members of the House of Representatives, national labor unions, Fortune 100 CEOs, and prominent civic leaders.

In 2004, Cherny was a Senior Fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.

From February 2003 through the spring of 2004, Cherny served as a senior advisor for John Kerry’s Presidential campaign. He was a key member of the small team that crafted the campaign’s message, policy, and communications strategies and created the “Bring It On” campaign strategy which led to Senator Kerry’s upset victory in the presidential primaries.

As the 2000 Platform Director, Cherny was the lead negotiator and chief drafter of the national 2000 Democratic Party Platform. He was charged with conducting the delicate negotiations that led to a deal on a platform that was widely seen as building consensus in the Democratic Party on a range of bold new ideas.

Cherny is the author of The Next Deal: The Future of Public Life in the Information Age, one of the top-selling political books of 2001, which examined the roles technological and generational change have played over the course of American history and laid out a progressive vision for government and community life in the 21st century. The book detailed how American life is being remade by a new desire for individualized choice and personal decision-making power. In 2005, the Financial Times reported that The Next Deal "has become required reading" in Tony Blair's government.

A former Senior Speechwriter and advisor to Vice President Al Gore, Cherny was the youngest White House Speechwriter in American history. The New York Times has cited Cherny’s “silky prose” while the Washington Post wrote that “Cherny could be far better than even Ted Sorensen or Peggy Noonan.”

Cherny has written frequently on politics, policy, and history for the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and New Republic, is a regular contributor to the Huffington Post, and appears as a commentator on television news programs including ABC’s Good Morning America, The O’Reilly Factor, and CNN Morning.

Cherny resides in Phoenix, Arizona where he serves as a criminal prosecutor. He graduated with honors from Harvard College and from UC Berkeley’s Boalt Hall Law School.

Blog Entries by Andrei Cherny

The Wait Is Over

7 Comments | Posted November 4, 2008 | 01:20 PM (EST)


Consider this: since Andrew Jackson - the father of the modern Democratic Party - left the White House, only two other Democrats (Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson) have convinced at least 51 percent of the country to back them for president. Being the party of change is never easy, but...

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Backstage at Colbert

Posted May 20, 2008 | 11:59 PM (EST)


Let me say one thing at the outset: if they had been passing out D minuses on the report card at Pixieland Kindergarten, I would have received one in arts and crafts. Asking me to take a pair of scissors and cut a straight line across a piece of paper...

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Countdown to Colbert: Any Advice?

Posted May 15, 2008 | 05:00 PM (EST)


I'm going on the Colbert Report tonight to talk about my new book, The Candy Bombers: The Untold Story of the Berlin Airlift and America's Finest Hour. So far the advice I've received is:

* Be funny
* Don't be funny
* Come with a joke prepared

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Madness in Washington?

Posted April 22, 2008 | 03:28 PM (EST)


What would happen if one of the people in charge of the American military had gone mad? What if it happened while we were on the brink of World War III and no one knew about it?

Those questions are not the stuff of thrillers, but of America's history. As...

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Candy Bombers Sneak Peek No. 2: A Battle for the Democratic Party's Soul

Posted April 3, 2008 | 03:14 PM (EST)


To see part 1 of this sneak peek of my upcoming book, The Candy Bombers, click here.

I didn't set out to write a book about American politics. In fact, I was trying to avoid it. I've been in the thick of it as a former aide in...

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Candy Bombers Sneak Peek No. 1: An Echo of the Past

Posted April 2, 2008 | 03:38 AM (EST)


Its been almost exactly three years since Arianna asked me to join her soon to launch group blog and, while I've been excited to see the Huffington Post grow, I've only been able to write intermittently. I have my excuses (marriage, fatherhood, starting a new journal), but my main...

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"Welcome Home from the Crow Eaters"

Posted January 12, 2008 | 11:45 PM (EST)


In my upcoming book, The Candy Bombers, I tell the story of how Harry Truman's election campaign in 1948 intersected with the war scare surrounding the Soviet blockade of Berlin. Contrary to conventional wisdom, it was not economic populism or personality contrasts that were - first and foremost -...

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NH Primary Day: Just Yet Begun...

Posted January 8, 2008 | 12:08 PM (EST)


I spent the day yesterday back in Salem with Mitt Romney and Hillary Clinton -- the two candidates who, most likely, will end up in second place when the votes in New Hampshire have been counted. But rather than seeing two contenders on their last legs, I came away convinced...

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NH Report, 1/6: The Next Campaign

Posted January 7, 2008 | 03:05 AM (EST)


I spent the day today in Salem, New Hampshire, a wonderful town of white-steepled churches and houses with porches, all shrouded in snow. There, John McCain and Barack Obama both held events -- separated by two blocks and three hours.

Both men were at the top of their games. McCain's...

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NH Report, 1/5: Everybody is Kung-Fu Fighting

Posted January 5, 2008 | 06:36 PM (EST)


As the big crowd stuffed itself into the cafeteria/auditorium of the Londonderry Middle School, the Dunkin Donuts were snapped up immediately. And there were no carrot sticks to be found. This is clearly not Mike Huckabee's natural constituency.

But there is something in the turnout that shows that guitar-playing,...

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Off to New Hampshire!

Posted January 3, 2008 | 11:02 PM (EST)


Four years ago, I was with John Kerry as he turned his victory in the Iowa caucuses into a clear road to the Democratic nomination. The question in this coming week is whether Barack Obama will be able to do the same.

John Edwards may have come in second, but...

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Yes, America, We're In a "War on Terror"

Posted December 13, 2007 | 01:04 AM (EST)


In the 24 hours since we released the Winter 2008 issue of Democracy, there's been a lot of discussion over my ending essay about the debate over the term "War on Terror." Many have agreed with the points I laid out, some have disagreed, but this is clearly...

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Iraq: Just Criticizing Is Not An Option

Posted October 9, 2007 | 07:20 AM (EST)


When the toll of the repercussions of the Bush administration's missteps and failures finally gets tallied up, one item on that long list will surely have be that too often Democrats and progressives were so purblind with justifiable anger that we allowed sputtering denunciations to take the place of thoughtful...

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The Argument

Posted September 12, 2007 | 10:19 AM (EST)


Reading the transcript of the HuffPost Live Chat with Matt Bai got me thinking about the swirl of discussion and debate surrounding his new book The Argument. While the book has been critically acclaimed, it has run into the same buzz saw of criticism that many...

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Setting the Record Straight

Posted June 4, 2007 | 10:55 AM (EST)


Let me get one thing straight at the outset: I have no animosity for Bob Shrum. He is an engaging, interesting guy with great stories to tell from years at the center of American politics. As many of you may know, during much of the time I was working for...

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Katrina: What if it wasn't "Once-in-a-Lifetime?"

Posted August 28, 2006 | 06:44 PM (EST)


On the one year anniversary of Katrina, the news media is rightfully remembering all the victims and recalling the Bush Administration's bureaucratic bungling. They are right to do so -- in fact, they should be doing even more of this. But there's more to the story.

We need to be...

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No More Democratic Weasels!

Posted July 10, 2006 | 05:59 PM (EST)


When we started up Democracy: A Journal of Ideas, I knew we wouldn't be popular in some quarters. After all, conservatives have had the corner on putting forward breakthrough ideas for most of the past generation. And they have grown used it.

Progressives have let them get away with...

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Building Democracy

Posted June 27, 2006 | 11:30 PM (EST)


For years, I have had a big concern that has animated much of my work: that progressives -- who did so much to build America over the course of our history -- needed new ideas and new approaches to respond to the way the world works in the 20th century....

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A New American Democracy

Posted January 11, 2006 | 04:49 AM (EST)


This past weekend, the Oregon Bus Project -- one of the most exciting, innovative, and energetic progressive organizations in the country -- had its annual Engage Oregon conference. There was a huge turnout and a great exchange of ideas. I was one of the keynoters, along with Oregon's...

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Creative Construction

Posted November 29, 2005 | 12:00 PM (EST)


The always insightful EJ Dionne of the Washington Post has a thought-provoking take on the American economy in his column today. It starts with a great story:

Decades ago, Walter Reuther, the storied head of the United Auto Workers union, was taken on a tour of an automated factory...
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