A Civics Lesson (of sorts): The Overton Window, the “No Kings” Protests & What’s at Stake for 2026-2028
I am taking a Criminal Justice class this semester, and my most recent assignment was on deviances. My Professor had commented on my paper and suggested I look at the Overton Window to see how these things play out in government. The Overton Window refers to the range of public policy ideas considered acceptable by the mainstream at a given time. Ideas outside that window are viewed as radical, extreme, or unacceptable. Over time, politicians, activists, media, and interest groups work to shift that window left, right, up, or down, so that what once seemed radical becomes mainstream, and what once was mainstream may move toward the fringes. In the criminal-justice context (and more broadly in governance), shifting this window matters. If the window moves toward greater federal centralization and executive power, policies that expand federal government oversight and reduce local autonomy may become “reasonable” rather than exceptional. Conversely, if the window shifts towar...