Cory Booker drops out; Eric Garcetti endorses Biden. Plus: The coming impeachment trial may turn out to be routine and predictable, but one figure might introduce some surprise.
Should she? Plus: What the other, other Rhodes-Scholar Mayor thinks now of his decision not to get into the 2020 presidential race.
The thin hope of preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons may be gone. Plus: “I know the man well enough to know that’s something he dreamed up all by himself.”
The two countries look to be in the same place they were before the killing of Qassem Soleimani: “Caught in a precarious standoff.” Plus: Inside a Warren rally.
67: That’s how many senators would have to buck Trump in the impending impeachment trial for the president to be booted from the White House.
Our staff writer David Graham argues that the Iran crisis reeks of the run-up to the Iraq War. Plus: The fans of Joe Biden’s make-America-nice-again vision.
What we learned in the decade that was. Plus: Why are American campaign cycles so interminable?
With all of the brain-frying news of 2019, here’s a taste of what we learned in this very chaotic year of politics. Plus, the most under-appreciated American right.
A few of the pieces—from Steve King to socialism—that stuck with our reporters this year.
Some of our most memorable profiles from 2019. You’ll recognize nearly all of these people as household names, but you’ll likely learn something new from each story.
An editorial in Christianity Today stunned observers by calling for Trump’s removal. Hear from its editor in chief. Plus: what the “wine caves” argument is about
The president’s rally last night “previewed just how toxic the coming year will be.” Plus, is Joe Biden still Schrödinger’s candidate, at once flopping and the front-runner?
The House of Representatives voted to impeach Donald Trump, an ignominious honor shared by Andrew Johnson (1868) and Bill Clinton (1998). What comes next?
Will impeachment energize Democrats sick of Trump, or will it mobilize Republicans who see overreach on the left? Or will it do neither? Plus, David Graham on the fiction of two Trumps.
“In impeaching Trump, House Democrats are posing a question whose answer they do not want to hear,” one writer argues. Plus: What is Tucker Carlson thinking?
The food fight within the Democratic Party plays out on all sorts of issues—including impeachment. Plus, Anne Applebaum on the false romance of Russia
“I was not surprised, because I come from Ukraine, and it’s a corruptive system. It’s everywhere, even here [in America].” Plus, how the young American left forms a third party.
“Spreadsheets,” he told our campaign reporter about his highly scrutinized time at McKinsey. Plus: Does Kamala Harris still have VP potential?
Dozens of states are still trying to keep the Paris Agreement alive. Plus: “Donald Trump’s lawyer is Benjamin Franklin’s night sweats.”
The impeachment inquiry is still partisan and divisive, and the Speaker seems to be resigned to it. Plus, how an old Democratic kingmaker might return to the scene.