The question is now or later. Strategy argues for now, even if the politics might be better later.
The religious case against Louisiana’s law mandating their display in classrooms.
Letting voters decide on abortion has energized the democratic process.
Johnson follows the latest fad rather than fix the public schools.
By restraining Israel, Biden makes a major war in the north more likely.
Imagine the praise if she deferred to Jack Smith’s bid for a pre-election conviction in the Trump classified-documents trial.
The Continent has already seen empires fade, but the U.S. remains dynamic.
The staff revolt is aimed at making Jeff Bezos so miserable that he’ll sell to a ‘better’ billionaire.
If Hamas prevails, terror will return to America before long.
‘The two camps settled on a day and a week when the Supreme Court will be handing down a series of explosive decisions.’
…and why shouldn’t they?
Governments push heavily subsidized renewables, but fossil-fuel use continues to increase even faster.
The president takes a risk in proposing a face-off so early in the cycle. He also has some advantages.
Democrats in Congress say they’ll hold middle-class tax cuts hostage to a huge overall tax increase.
Do federal judges need to weigh in on ‘Larry the Farting Leprechaun’?
Jeremy Hunt, one of the former Prime Minister’s vocal critics, now concedes she might have had a point.
For good this time, thanks to declining enrollment. Unlike during the pandemic, now the left is desperate to keep them open.
Queers for Palestine? The contradictions are causing a crash at the intersection.
The regime is blaming the opposition. But the loss of the refiner is all Chávez’s doing.
The crazy economic theory that spending has no consequences.
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