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Charles Wheelan
Charles Wheelan
from Wikipedia

Charles J. Wheelan (born 1966) is an American professor, journalist, speaker, and is the founder and co-chairman of Unite America.[1] Wheelan is the author of Naked Statistics, Naked Economics, and Naked Money. He was an unsuccessful Democratic candidate in the special election for Illinois's 5th congressional district, the seat vacated by Rahm Emanuel.[2]

Key Information

Journalist and author

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Wheelan graduated from Dartmouth College in 1988; he was a member of Alpha Delta fraternity.[3] From 1997 to 2002, he was the Midwest correspondent for The Economist. He has also written for the Chicago Tribune, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and Yahoo! Finance.[4]

Charles Wheelan is a senior lecturer and policy fellow at the Rockefeller Center at Dartmouth College.

Wheelan is a regular contributor to the Motley Fool Radio Show on National Public Radio and to the Eight Forty-Eight program on WBEZ, Chicago Public Radio.

Wheelan's first book, Naked Economics (2002), is an introduction to economics for lay readers; Naked Statistics (2013) is an introduction to statistics. The Centrist Manifesto (2013) attempts to articulate a centrism that is more than a set of compromises between the political extremes, a perspective Wheelan elsewhere characterizes as radical centrist.

Works

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Books
  • Naked Economics: Undressing the Dismal Science, W.W. Norton, 2002. ISBN 978-0-393-33764-8
  • Revealing Chicago: An Aerial Portrait, Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 2005. ISBN 0-8109-5874-0
  • Introduction to Public Policy, W.W. Norton, 2010. ISBN 978-0-393-92665-1
  • 10 1/2 Things No Commencement Speaker Has Ever Said, W. W. Norton, 2012. ISBN 978-0-393-07431-4
  • The Centrist Manifesto, W.W. Norton, 2013. ISBN 978-0-393-34687-9
  • Naked Statistics: Stripping the Dread from the Data, W.W. Norton, 2013. ISBN 978-0-393-07195-5
  • Naked Money: A Revealing Look at What It Is and Why It Matters, W.W. Norton, 2016. ISBN 978-0-393-06902-0

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Charles Wheelan is an American , , and political reformer known for popularizing through accessible nonfiction and advocating electoral reforms to reduce partisanship. Wheelan serves as and policy fellow at Dartmouth College's , where he joined full-time in 2012 after teaching at the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy. His breakthrough work, Naked Economics: Undressing (2002), explains core economic principles without jargon and has achieved New York Times bestseller status, earning praise for its clarity and engaging style. Subsequent books like Naked Statistics: Stripping the Dread from the Data (2013) and Naked Money (2016) extend this approach to data analysis and monetary systems, while The Centrist Manifesto (2013) critiques two-party dominance. In politics, Wheelan ran unsuccessfully as a Democratic candidate for in a 2009 special election. Motivated by frustration with polarization, he founded Unite America in 2015 to promote measures such as ranked-choice voting and nonpartisan primaries aimed at empowering independents and centrists. Earlier in his career, he worked as Midwest correspondent for from 1997 to 2002. Wheelan earned a B.A. from , a master's in public affairs from , and a Ph.D. in public policy from the ; he has received student-voted teaching awards at both Chicago and Dartmouth.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Upbringing

Charles Wheelan grew up in , a suburb north of . He attended in Northbrook, graduating with the class of 1984. Little public information is available regarding his family background or specific childhood experiences.

Academic Degrees and Influences

Wheelan received a degree in from in 1988. Following a period in , he pursued graduate studies in , earning a from Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs in 1993. This program emphasized analysis of domestic and international policy issues, aligning with Wheelan's subsequent focus on economic and governmental reforms. Wheelan completed a Ph.D. in at the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy in 1998. His doctoral training at this institution, known for its rigorous empirical approach to , informed his later work in applying economic principles to real-world challenges, though specific dissertation details or advisory influences remain undocumented in available records.

Journalism Career

Work at The Economist

From 1997 to 2002, Wheelan served as the Midwest correspondent for , based in , where he reported on economic policies, political trends, and social issues across the region. In this capacity, he produced over 100 articles, focusing on topics such as regional manufacturing declines, agricultural markets, urban development, and policy responses to economic shifts in states like , , and . One of his prominent contributions was a cover story published on August 10, 2002, examining America's expanding ex-convict population and its socioeconomic implications, including rates exceeding 60% within three years of release and the challenges of reintegration amid limited employment opportunities for former inmates. The piece highlighted data from the showing over 600,000 individuals released annually from state and federal prisons, underscoring policy failures in rehabilitation and collateral consequences like voting disenfranchisement affecting millions. Wheelan also periodically wrote the Lexington column, The Economist's longstanding anonymous feature on U.S. politics, offering analysis of national elections, congressional dynamics, and fiscal debates with a focus on Midwestern perspectives. His tenure reflected 's emphasis on data-driven , often incorporating econometric evidence and comparative international benchmarks to critique American institutions.

Other Journalistic Contributions

Prior to joining , Wheelan gained early journalistic experience as a roving foreign for The Valley News, a newspaper, during a post-high school in the mid-1980s. After concluding his role as Midwest for in 2002, Wheelan contributed freelance articles and op-eds to major U.S. publications, including , , , and the . These pieces often addressed , , and political reform, reflecting his expertise as an and policy analyst. In a January 27, 2019, Washington Post op-ed, Wheelan advocated for independent presidential candidate , arguing that a viable centrist option could disrupt the two-party duopoly and appeal to disaffected voters. On May 28, 2020, he authored a New York Times DealBook analysis examining how economic data visualizations shaped the Trump-Biden election narrative, emphasizing the role of in voter persuasion over partisan rhetoric. Wheelan's op-eds frequently promoted bipartisan solutions and electoral innovations; for instance, in December 2020, he proposed establishing a permanent "America Caucus" in the U.S. Senate to foster cross-aisle collaboration on legislation. He has also written for regional outlets, such as a April 21, 2019, VTDigger piece supporting funding for Vermont's Parent Child Centers network, citing their data-driven impact on family stability and outcomes. These contributions underscore his shift from staff reporting to opinion-driven focused on .

Academic Career

Positions at University of Chicago

Wheelan served as senior lecturer in at the Harris School of Public Policy, , from 2004 to 2012. In this role, he instructed graduate-level courses on regional policy, the policy process, international policy issues, and analyzing and communicating policy. One signature offering was the inaugural International Policy Practicum, which he designed and led on economic reform in ; the course combined classroom instruction with a 10-day field trip to Bangalore and . Courses such as "Analyzing and Communicating Policy" incorporated practical exercises, including student pitches of policy recommendations during sessions at Chicago's WBEZ-FM public radio studios, while "Analysis of Regional Policy" emphasized applied policy evaluation. In the 2004–2005 academic year, shortly after joining the faculty, Wheelan received the Harris School students' vote for Professor of the Year in a Non-Core Course. In spring 2024, Wheelan returned to the Harris School as a visiting lecturer to teach "Analyzing and Communicating ."

Role at

Charles Wheelan serves as Senior Lecturer and Policy Fellow at Dartmouth College's Nelson A. Rockefeller Center for and the Social Sciences. He joined the Dartmouth faculty full-time in the fall of 2012, after eight years teaching at the University of Chicago's Harris School of Public Policy. In this role, Wheelan emphasizes practical applications of economics and policy analysis to real-world issues, including , , federal debt, , , and . Wheelan teaches undergraduate courses such as Economics of making (Public Policy 40), The Future of (Government 68), and Educational Issues in Contemporary Society, drawing on his textbook Introduction to Public Policy to integrate academic tools with policy challenges. He also holds the position of of Business Administration at Dartmouth's , where he serves as Faculty Director of the Center for Business, Government & Society, bridging with business perspectives on and societal impacts. His teaching has earned significant student recognition, including selection as one of Dartmouth's top 10 by the graduating classes of 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017. Additional honors include serving as Class Day Speaker for the classes of 2011 and 2020, the 2020 Dean of Faculty Teaching Award, the 2014 Distinguished Lecturer Award, and the 2010 Green Key Faculty Award. These accolades reflect his approach to accessible, engaging instruction informed by prior experience in , speechwriting, and political campaigns.

Political Activities

2005 Congressional Campaign

In early December 2008, following Rahm Emanuel's resignation from Congress to serve as in the incoming Obama administration, Charles Wheelan announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination in the special election for . As a senior lecturer in at the University of Chicago's Harris School, Wheelan positioned himself as a policy expert emphasizing economic competence and pragmatic governance, drawing on his background as author of Naked Economics (2002) and former correspondent. His campaign highlighted issues like fiscal responsibility, economic recovery amid the , and expertise; a notable advertisement featured Wheelan submerged underwater to symbolize the "drowning" economy and the need for clear-headed solutions. The Democratic primary, held on March 3, 2009, featured a crowded field of 12 candidates, including state senators and local officials. Wheelan finished fourth with approximately 8% of the vote, behind winner (who received about 31%), John Fritchey (24%), and Sara Feigenholtz (14%), in a fragmented contest where no candidate secured a . Quigley advanced to the April 7 special and won decisively against Republican nominee Rosanna Pulido. Despite the loss, Wheelan's campaign garnered praise from the , which editorialized that his economic and policy acumen made him a strong contender, though local political connections favored establishment figures like Quigley. The effort raised over $300,000 but underscored challenges for outsider candidates in machine-influenced . Wheelan later reflected that the experience informed his advocacy for electoral reforms to empower centrists and reduce partisanship.

Founding and Leadership of Unite America

Charles Wheelan founded Unite America in 2014, initially under the name the Centrist Project, as a nonpartisan initiative to address political dysfunction through electoral reforms. The organization emerged directly from ideas in Wheelan's 2013 book The Centrist Manifesto, which critiqued the U.S. two-party system's incentives for extremism and proposed multiparty democracy via reforms like ranked-choice voting and open primaries to empower moderate voices. As founder and board member, Wheelan has shaped Unite America's strategy to invest philanthropic funds in state-level campaigns for nonpartisan changes, including top-four primaries, , and independent commissions, aiming to increase voter choice and representation. In 2019, the pivoted under leadership involving Wheelan from backing independent candidates to prioritizing structural reforms, reflecting a focus on systemic incentives over individual candidacies. Unite America, headquartered in with a team of over 35 staff from diverse partisan backgrounds, has committed more than $50 million to these efforts, notably serving as the largest funder of Measure 2 in , which implemented a top-four primary and ranked-choice voting system effective in 2022. Wheelan's involvement has emphasized data-driven advocacy, drawing on his academic background to promote reforms that suggests reduce polarization, such as Alaska's system yielding more competitive general elections with broader ideological representation.

Advocacy for Ranked-Choice Voting and Electoral Reforms

Wheelan has promoted ranked-choice voting (RCV) as a key mechanism to reform U.S. elections by enabling voters to rank candidates in order of preference, thereby ensuring that winners achieve majority support and diminishing the strategic incentives for spoiler candidacies or extreme polarization. Through his founding of Unite America in 2013, the organization has channeled philanthropic resources into state-level implementations of RCV, alongside complementary reforms such as nonpartisan open primaries and independent redistricting commissions, with the aim of disrupting the dominance of the two major parties and incentivizing compromise-oriented candidates. In a 2019 Economist article, Wheelan detailed how RCV addresses flaws in the winner-take-all system, which he contends amplifies partisanship by rewarding narrow ideological appeals over broad coalitions; under RCV, if no candidate secures a first-round majority, lower-choice votes are redistributed until a majority threshold is met, fostering elections where candidates must appeal beyond their base to gain secondary preferences. He has specifically endorsed a "top-four" primary model—where all voters select from the four highest vote-getters in a nonpartisan primary, followed by RCV in the general election—as a scalable approach to enhance representation, including for presidential races, arguing it would allow independent and third-party voices to compete without fragmenting votes. Wheelan's advocacy extends to public engagements, such as a May 15, 2025, address to the Rotary Club of , where he emphasized that RCV consolidates voter preferences rather than splitting them, countering arguments that it complicates ballots or dilutes major-party strength; he cited empirical outcomes in adopting jurisdictions, like reduced and higher voter satisfaction. These views align with his broader thesis in The Centrist Manifesto (2013), which laid the groundwork for Unite America by critiquing the electoral system's bias toward duopoly and proposing structural changes to elevate centrist, evidence-based policymaking over ideological entrenchment. Unite America's efforts under Wheelan's influence have supported RCV ballot measures and pilots in states including (adopted via 2020 referendum) and (implemented starting 2018), focusing on data-driven evidence that RCV increases turnout among independents—who comprise about 40% of U.S. voters—and correlates with more in races. Wheelan maintains that such reforms, when bundled, create a "fulcrum" effect where moderate candidates hold decisive power, as evidenced by simulations showing reduced in multiparty scenarios compared to binary contests.

Authorship and Publications

Wheelan gained prominence as an author of accessible books that explain complex economic concepts to general audiences, eschewing technical jargon and mathematical models in favor of real-world examples and narrative clarity. His "Naked" series, beginning with Naked Economics: Undressing the Dismal Science in 2002, became New York Times bestsellers, emphasizing incentives, markets, and as core drivers of economic outcomes. These works prioritize empirical observations over ideological prescriptions, critiquing government interventions that distort price signals while acknowledging market failures where externalities or public goods are involved. Naked Economics, first published in April 2002 by , introduces fundamental principles such as , externalities, and the role of incentives in , using anecdotes from everyday life and historical events to illustrate points like the inefficiency of rent control or the benefits of . Revised editions, including a fully updated version in 2010, incorporated contemporary examples such as the to demonstrate how in lending contributed to systemic risks. The book argues that sound policy emerges from aligning individual incentives with broader social welfare, rather than top-down mandates, and has sold over a million copies by focusing on causal mechanisms like asymmetric information in markets. In Naked Statistics: Stripping the Dread from the Data, published in 2013, Wheelan demystifies statistical tools including , versus causation, and sampling biases, applying them to debates such as evaluating welfare programs or interpreting medical trials. He stresses the importance of statistical literacy for assessing claims in economics and , warning against common fallacies like confusing with causation in observational data from sources like government reports. Naked Money: A Revealing Look at What It Is, What It Does, and Why We Need It, released in hardcover in March 2016 and paperback in April 2017, examines the functions of money, central banking, and financial systems, using cases like and the Eurozone crisis to highlight how fiat currencies rely on trust and policy credibility for stability. Wheelan critiques excessive reliance on post-2008, arguing it risks in banking while underscoring the Federal Reserve's of and employment as a pragmatic framework grounded in historical monetary experiments. Wheelan's policy-oriented work, The Centrist Manifesto, published on April 12, 2013, advocates for pragmatic, evidence-based reforms to counter partisan gridlock, proposing mechanisms like ranked-choice voting to incentivize coalition-building and reduce in electoral outcomes. Drawing on economic reasoning, it critiques both major U.S. parties for fiscal irresponsibility—such as Democrats' spending expansions without offsets and Republicans' tax cuts without entitlement reforms—and calls for policies evaluated by cost-benefit analysis rather than ideology. The book positions not as equidistance but as fidelity to outcomes supported by data, such as reforms balancing labor market needs with enforcement.

Other Writings and Columns

Wheelan served as Midwest correspondent for from 1997 to 2002, where he reported, wrote, and photographed for the United States section, contributing over 100 stories. His coverage included a cover story on August 10, 2002, examining America's ex-convict population, and he periodically authored the "Lexington" column on American politics. From 2005 to 2010, Wheelan wrote "The Naked Economist," a monthly column for Yahoo! Finance that applied economic principles to everyday issues such as healthcare costs and . Wheelan has contributed freelance articles and op-eds to outlets including the , New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and . For the Wall Street Journal, he published "10 Things Your Commencement Speaker Won't Tell You" on April 30, 2012, offering economic advice to graduates. In , his opinion pieces addressed topics like the failures of the in a May 2, 2013, article and the neglect of the economy in a March 14, 2016, piece. He co-authored a opinion article with on October 15, 2020, proposing reforms to nominations. Additionally, Wheelan penned an titled "It's Time for the 'America Caucus' in the U.S. " in 2020, advocating for bipartisan congressional .

Political Views and Reception

Centrist Philosophy and Critiques of Partisanship

Wheelan articulates a centered on pragmatic that synthesizes effective policies from both major parties, arguing that the rational represents the majority of who prioritize over ideological purity. In his 2013 book The Centrist Manifesto, he posits that Democrats contribute strengths in social welfare and , while Republicans excel in fiscal discipline and free-market incentives, but neither party fully embodies these in practice due to partisan distortions. This approach rejects zero-sum partisanship in favor of evidence-based solutions to national challenges, such as infrastructure decay and entitlement solvency, emphasizing that centrists should focus on outcomes rather than tribal loyalty. He critiques the two-party duopoly for fostering extreme polarization that paralyzes decision-making, pointing to recurrent debt ceiling crises and Congress's approval ratings dipping below 10% in multiple years, including 9% in 2013, as symptoms of where partisan incentives prioritize obstruction over . Wheelan contends that gerrymandered districts and closed primaries amplify ideological fringes, sidelining the centrist voting bloc—estimated at over 40% of the electorate in Gallup polls from 2013—who are more amenable to cross-aisle deals on issues like and compromises. This setup, he argues, precludes healthy by entrenching incumbents and rewarding performative , as evidenced by the parties' co-option of electoral rules that deter third-party viability. To counter partisanship, Wheelan advocates electoral reforms including nonpartisan redistricting, universal open primaries with top-two advancement, and the strategic of a small cadre of independent or centrist senators—targeting five to seven from moderate regions like and the Midwest—to wield fulcrum power by denying either party a . These mechanisms, he claims, would incentivize moderation by broadening candidate appeal beyond base voters, drawing on empirical examples like Louisiana's jungle primary system, which has produced more bipartisan outcomes since 2008. Through initiatives like Unite America, founded in 2014 from his manifesto's ideas, Wheelan promotes these changes to restore competition and elevate policy substance over partisan theater.

Achievements and Criticisms

Wheelan's authorship has achieved significant reach in popularizing economics, with Naked Economics: Undressing the Dismal Science (2002) translated into 14 languages and lauded for distilling complex principles without jargon or graphs. His subsequent works, including Naked Statistics (2013) and Naked Money (2016), extend this approach to statistics and finance, earning endorsements for enhancing public understanding of quantitative reasoning in policy debates. At , where he serves as senior lecturer in , Wheelan received the 2020 Dean of Faculty Teaching Award for instructional excellence and was chosen by the as their Class Day Faculty Speaker, reflecting student appreciation for his engaging seminars on business-government intersections. Founding Unite America in 2013—spurred by his book The Centrist Manifesto—marks a key accomplishment in Wheelan's reform efforts, establishing the organization as a philanthropic fund backing nonpartisan electoral changes like ranked-choice voting to mitigate zero-sum partisanship and amplify moderate voices in governance. Critics of Wheelan's economic writings contend that Naked Economics embeds a pro-market under the guise of neutrality, employing strawman depictions of and alternatives while glossing over capitalism's flaws, such as inequality amplified by market incentives. One faults its "cringe-inducing dad-humour" and oversimplifications as masking an uncritical endorsement of free-market orthodoxy, potentially misleading novices on trade-offs in policy design. His centrist advocacy via Unite America has drawn implicit partisan pushback, with skeptics questioning whether structural reforms like open primaries sufficiently address deeper ideological rifts without diluting accountability to core voter bases.

Personal Life

Family and Interests

Wheelan is married to Leah Wheelan, principal of Elementary School in Canaan, New Hampshire; she previously worked as a high school math teacher and tech entrepreneur. The couple has three children: daughters Katrina and , and son CJ. The family resides in , near the . Wheelan and his wife first traveled the world together after graduating from in 1988. They later took their daughters on a journey via the Trans-Mongolian Railroad, and in 2016–2017, the entire family undertook a nine-month trip across six continents with their three teenagers, an experience detailed in Wheelan's 2021 memoir We Came, We Saw, We Left. Wheelan's interests include outdoor pursuits such as , , and . The family maintains a shared enthusiasm for as a means of personal enrichment. They own a black named Lily.

Recent Activities

In October 2024, Wheelan was appointed faculty director of the Tuck School of Business's for Business, , and Society at , where he aims to bridge business practices with challenges. Previously a and policy fellow at Dartmouth's , this role expands his focus on and institutional reform. Wheelan continued advocating for electoral reforms through , including a December 11, 2024, address to the Rotary Club of on on college campuses. On May 15, 2025, he spoke to the Rotary Club of , on ranked-choice voting, emphasizing its potential to reduce partisan extremism in elections. These engagements align with his ongoing role as founder and co-chair of Unite America, a nonpartisan organization promoting independent candidacies and voting system changes, though no major organizational announcements were reported in this period. No new publications appeared after his 2016 book Naked Money, with Wheelan's recent efforts centered on teaching at Dartmouth and select advocacy events rather than authorship.

References

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