The United States in 2025: Contested continuity and change
After a genuinely extraordinary presidential campaign, one which looks likely to extend well past election day, the United States faces 2025 arguably more divided than it was four years ago.
The implications of the results suggest that, in coming months, political battles will be fought at state and federal level centring on executive power, legislative priorities and economic policy –all against a background of rising global tensions.
After a campaign notably short on policy discussion, what can we expect from the new administration and, equally importantly, from the new Congress? While many of the personnel have changed, many of the problems they face remain the same – how different will the policy responses be next year?
Oxford Analytica will hold a webinar on November 20 in which our team of experts will consider a range of questions, including:
- How much leeway will the election winners have to make policy changes?
- How far will the state of the economy define the year ahead?
- How far will Washington’s own view of its role in the world begin to change?
Wednesday, November 20
3:00pm-4:00pm UK | 10:00am-11:00am ET
Registration: http://oxan.to/deepdivenov
Panelists:
Sarah Fowler, Senior Analyst, International Economic, Oxford Analytica
Trevor McCrisken, Reader in US Foreign Policy at the University of Warwick
Paul Maidment, Editor, the Oxford Analytica Investor Brief
Chris Siepmann, former Director of Trade Enforcement, Office of the United States Trade Representative
Chair: Nicholas Redman, Director of Analysis, Oxford Analytica
Registering for this webinar
Who should attend?
This deep dive is a closed webinar only for Oxford Analytica clients. It will benefit those who are in foreign and defence ministries, intelligence agencies, as well as senior executives and those involved in government affairs, legal services and finance, public policy. Not a client? Find out more about the service and how we can help you navigate complex markets.
Background briefings
Each session is supported by a background briefing curated by our team of expert analysts who produce our flagship publication, the Oxford Analytica Daily Brief. These in-depth briefings are circulated to attendees in advance of each call and are available as written articles published in the Daily Brief.