Is this what the post-Trump era will feel like?
Just because we know bad things about the 45th president, don’t assume that there’s nothing bad left to find out.
The nation faces an unprecedented crisis, and the president has left a void.
Tens of thousands may die between now and President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration.
The president showed nearly as much disrespect for the White House as he did for the presidency itself.
“There is nothing about him that goes gently into the night.”
His forever campaign is just getting started.
If he’s reelected, the president appears poised to dismiss an array of senior appointees, replacing them with loyalists.
Media outlets appear to be operating on the assumption that Trump will lose, and are covering his latest scandals accordingly.
Four risks to guard against now
White House aides cater to the president’s emotional needs, at the expense of the country’s interests and his own health.
The president worried that a public show of concern would create panic and imperil his reelection—but instead, his approach enabled the virus’s spread.
The president’s favorite debate tactic was a foundational form of disrespect—levied against his opponent as well as the nation.
Former aides say that in private, the president has spoken with cynicism and contempt about believers.
His tax returns dispel all his pretensions to wealth and sacrifice, and his reelection campaign is running out of time.
From the coronavirus to Russian electoral interference, the president keeps trying to paper over problems instead of addressing them.
Many of the president’s statements are difficult to decode—so why doesn’t that concern his supporters?
The president thinks that inflaming racial tension and provoking violence will aid his campaign. The numbers suggest otherwise.
What did Donald Trump say to Vladimir Putin when no one else could hear them?