Democracy and sound economic policy are on the wane, and Lula is leading the way.
The party needs to find a way to hold Trump’s support among diverse working-class voters.
If all Ramaswamy and Musk can do is save a few billion dollars, it will be worth it.
From vaccines to GMO food, his views put him on the anti-business left.
Skeptics sneer, but the duo are serious about shrinking government.
Chicago’s Brandon Johnson gives up on a $300 billion property tax hike.
As the publisher’s trial resumes, is his jailing worth the cost to Xi?
Republicans since Reagan have said Latinos were conservative at heart. Now they are at the ballot box.
The U.S. homeownership rate was 64% in 1967, two years after the department opened. Now it’s . . . 64%.
The next president is sowing a narrative with his cabinet picks. The world situation requires more.
Or will you? Readers consider the Nixon option.
On inflation, immigration and transgenderism, progressive philanthropies took the party to places voters didn’t want to go.
In the 1970s, skyrocketing prices spurred free-market reforms that promoted economic stability. In the 2020s, they fueled Trump’s comeback.
The House passes a bipartisan benefit blowout, though the program is already going broke.
When I see the determination of these brave Jewish students standing tall, I feel hope.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth? Attorney General Matt Gaetz? He can’t be serious, can he? Meanwhile, Democrats look for new ways to cope.
To install AG Matt Gaetz this way would be anti-constitutional.
Her ‘pause’ kept the issue from hurting Democrats in the House.
With his nomination for attorney general, the president-elect crosses the thin line that separates bravery from foolhardiness.
What the expanding Republican coalition means for the pious and the ‘nones.’
Pages