What Can Women Do Now?
Trump’s victory is a referendum on feminist progress.
Trump’s victory is a referendum on feminist progress.
Kamala Harris lost the state, but many down-ballot races went their way.
How do we move forward, as a nation, without looking at strangers as potential enemies?
Voters seemed willing to back both state referenda enshrining reproductive rights and the candidate whose Supreme Court appointees overturned Roe.
Embedded in their autopsies was their own unstated faith that they could have done better.
So much for the “Blue Wall.”
And now we all must suffer through it.
This was the second COVID election.
Kamala Harris couldn’t outrun inflation.
Harris was probably doomed from the jump.
No matter what the Supreme Court says, the president is not a king.
The former and future president got one big thing right.
As the evening wore on, the news got worse—and the guest of honor never showed.
The United States is about to become a different kind of country.
As in many other areas across the country, Kamala Harris could not match Joe Biden’s 2020 performance.
In the three crucial swing states, a large majority of voters were fiercely discontented.
How to watch the election without falling for conspiracy theories
Two key components of a contentious presidential election are speaking loudly to the present.
Democrats are guessing that some nominally conservative married women will vote for Harris so long as they are certain their votes will be kept secret.
Some liberals insist that they’re not joking this time: They are very scared, and very ready to leave the country if Donald Trump is reelected.