Rethinking Democracy is an ongoing podcast series from MEI’s Gonul Tol that explores the evolving challenges facing democratic institutions around the world. As citizens in the US and globally grapple with declining trust in democracy, the series examines how domestic and international threats to democratic governance are deeply interconnected. Through in-depth conversations and analysis, the podcast investigates the forces undermining liberal democratic norms—and what can be done to counter them.
You can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other podcast providers.
Host
Episodes
Can Turkey’s Opposition Fight Back?
A Turkish court has taken a dramatic step that could reshape the country’s political landscape. It annulled the results of the CHP’s 2023 party congress, effectively overturning the election of Özgür Özel as leader of Turkey’s main opposition party and potentially paving the way for former chairman Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu to return.
Can Hamas Be Disarmed?
Will the PKK Really Disarm?
In 2025, jailed PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan made a historic call for the group to disarm and dissolve, raising hopes of ending a 40-year conflict that has shaped Turkey and the wider region. Months later, the PKK symbolically laid down arms in what many viewed as a breakthrough moment for the peace process.
Can Syria Hold Together?
Syria is in the midst of a fragile transition. Many observers see positive momentum, with new humanitarian initiatives underway and fresh funding beginning to flow. But the risks remain serious: regional spillover, deep humanitarian needs, funding shortfalls, Israeli strikes, sectarian tensions, stalled political tracks, and continued reports of abuses by multiple actors.
Nazanin Boniadi: How the World Can Help Iran’s Democratic Struggle
Lebanon at the Brink: War, Hizballah, and the Fate of Democracy
Israel’s escalating campaign against Iran-backed Hezbollah is rapidly turning Lebanon into one of the most unstable fronts in the wider US-Israel confrontation with Iran — pushing an already fragile state to the brink. The war is tearing at Lebanon’s sectarian and political fabric, displacing Shiite communities and deepening polarization between Hezbollah and its rivals.
The Kurdish Card: Can Iranian Kurds Shape the War’s Endgame?
Is Turkey the New Iran — Or Is that the Wrong Question?
The balance of power in the Middle East is shifting. Iran is on the defensive — its military capabilities were badly degraded by last year’s 12 days of Israeli and US strikes, and growing protests at home have made the regime look more vulnerable than it has in years.
After Rojava: What’s Next for the Kurds?
Dramatic developments in Syria have delivered a major blow to Kurdish ambitions for self-rule. In a rapid offensive, Damascus moved into northeast Syria, forcing the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) out and effectively dismantling the autonomous region the Kurds had built during the civil war.