Films | Subscriber events

The world goes to the polls

icon-calendar Tuesday September 24th 2024
The world goes to the polls

Unmissable conversations with global thought-leaders

Subscribe to get full access
  • Get exclusive access to specialist knowledge and intelligent debate on today's most pressing issues
  • Pose questions directly to our journalists at subscriber-only live digital events
  • Enjoy unlimited access to all our journalism plus newsletters and award-winning podcasts

Event overview

Join our editor-in-chief and senior correspondents for an event broadcast live from New York, exploring the consequences of the year’s major elections—from America to India, France, Venezuela and beyond. More than 70 countries are holding elections this year, representing half the world’s population. What do the results reveal about the state of democracy in 2024? Can far-right parties be countered, as in France? And as America prepares to vote, what could the outcome mean for the world?

Speakers

  • Zanny Minton Beddoes
    Editor-in-chief
    Zanny Minton Beddoes is the editor-in-chief of The Economist. Prior to this role, she was the economics editor, overseeing the global economics coverage. Ms Minton Beddoes has written extensively about international financial issues, including the enlargement of the European Union, the future of the International Monetary Fund and economic reform in emerging economies. She has published in Foreign Affairs and Foreign Policy, contributed chapters to several conference volumes and, in 1997, edited “Emerging Asia”, a book on the future of emerging markets in Asia. In May 1998, she testified before Congress on the introduction of the euro.
  • Idrees Khaloon
    Washington bureau chief
    Idrees Kahloon leads The Economist’s coverage of the White House, Congress and national politics. Prior to that, he was the Washington correspondent and focused on policy matters. He began at The Economist as a data journalist in London. He graduated from Harvard University with a degree in applied mathematics and economics.
  • Sophie Pedder
    Paris bureau chief
    Sophie Pedder covers French politics and economics. She joined The Economist in 1990 and has reported on Britain, European politics, the media industry, and the end of apartheid in South Africa as the Johannesburg correspondent in the 1990s. Earlier, she was a research assistant for William Julius Wilson at the University of Chicago’s Urban Poverty and Family Life project. She is the author of “Revolution Française: Emmanuel Macron and the Quest to Reinvent a Nation” (Bloomsbury, 2018), and “Le déni français” (JC Lattès, 2012). A graduate of Oxford University and the University of Chicago, she won the David Watt journalism prize in 2006.
  • David Rennie
    Geopolitics editor
    David Rennie writes about geopolitics and co-hosts the Drum Tower podcast on China. Since he joined The Economist in 2007, he has worked as a columnist in Brussels, London, Washington and Beijing, where he was bureau chief from 2018 to 2024. Previously, he was a foreign correspondent for the Daily Telegraph, a contributing editor of the Spectator magazine and a reporter for the Evening Standard. He has won several awards, most recently the 2023 Osborn Elliott Prize for Excellence in Journalism on Asia, shared with his Drum Tower co-host, Sue-Lin Wong.

FAQs

Where do I watch the live event?

Before the event you will receive an email with a link saying “Join now”. This will take you to the event page where you will see a countdown clock indicating how long until the event begins. Shortly before the event, a video player will automatically appear on your screen. If a video player does not appear, please refresh your browser. At the time of the event the video player should start automatically, if it does not, please press play.

Can I watch subscriber events with closed captions?

During the live event participants have the option to enable automated closed captions. Please note the captions are automated and so not verified by The Economist.

How do I submit a question for an upcoming subscriber event?

Visit the events hub and click on the page for the upcoming event. On this page you will see a section where you can submit your question. You can also use the same Q&A tool to submit your questions during the live event.

Why can I see the live event but not hear any sound?

Some web browsers prevent sound from playing automatically. Select the mute/unmute button in the video player or on your browser tab to start the audio.

More from United States

The U.S. Supreme Court building.

The Supreme Court begins another contentious term

Guns, vapes, online porn and health care for transgender youth dot the docket

A reach stacker carries a container at the Packer Avenue Marine Terminal in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

What America’s presidential election means for world trade

The first in a series of eight concise briefs on the consequences of the 2024 election

JD Vance And Tim Walz Face Off In Vice Presidential Debate In New York

Checks and Balance newsletter: gender politics in the election 

Both parties are telling very different stories about gender