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http://online.wsj.com/page/2_0006.html
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11 hours 33 min ago
He’s a nominee for those who want the law used for political revenge, and it won’t end well.
GOP Senators rally behind McConnell’s long-time deputy.
Tighter fuel standards will hurt California’s low-income workers.
The singer combines archival recordings and contemporary sessions to collaborate with relatives past and present on this 3-LP set that finds her digging into her roots and tracing musical evolutions across the generations.
In 2016 they lay down in the street to stop traffic. In 2024 they had cookies and milk.
It turns out Trump didn’t improve his total vote count much from 2020 to 2024.
The president-elect has a lot in common with Italy’s leader.
An exhibition at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts focuses on photographers from the European nation who ended up in the U.S., where many of them forged brilliant careers.
To prepare, Defense Secretary-designate Pete Hegseth will need to overhaul the bureaucracy and cut waste.
A minimum 10% levy on all goods would hike domestic prices, reduce wages and invite foreign retaliation.
Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency has a chance to bring accountability to federal regulation.
Historians rank presidents one way, the public another. A few presidents surprise skeptics and rise to distinction.
The path to a political rebound runs through Sacramento.
The major parties have swapped positions on issues ranging from trade and government surveillance to free speech and war.
His limits on Kyiv’s defenses mean settling the war won’t be easy.
Students discuss the results and the aftermath of the races.
Too bad this year’s global climate confab won’t be the last.
The GOP Senate candidate loses another winnable race, proving again that candidate quality matters.
Why does the Golden State take weeks to count election ballots?
Black and Hispanic voters defect from Democrats, who have long relied on identity-politics appeals.
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