Washington Is Shocked
Just shocked, I tell you.
Just shocked, I tell you.
An untested provision in the Constitution might allow him to install his Cabinet picks no matter what the Senate has to say.
An election is not a jury verdict, and winning an election doesn’t make you any less guilty.
Italy knows a thing or two about what the United States faces—but there are key differences between the two countries’ experiences.
The sheer quantity of individually unqualified selections might make blocking any of them harder.
The conspiratorial and chaotic independent is poised to join the government that he claims is lying to you.
Trump vowed to lower food prices. His policies will almost certainly do the opposite.
Swing-state successes in the last midterms gave the party false optimism about 2024.
Trump’s pick for attorney general will get to burnish his MAGA-loyalist credentials whether or not the Senate confirms him.
The first year of Trump’s new administration may be as dangerous as the last year of his previous one.
Even as he fulminates against Democrats and bureaucrats, Trump’s most radical proposals are aimed at bypassing members of his own party.
With his Cabinet picks, Donald Trump is causing a civil-service exodus that may hobble federal infrastructure for generations.
The same young people once derided as liberal snowflakes are moving to the right.
Trump’s ridiculous Cabinet nominations will provide senators with a new test.
In the future, even winning the former “Blue Wall” states won’t be enough for the party’s presidential nominees.
The president-elect’s most controversial Cabinet picks share one crucial tie.
The Senate GOP elected John Thune as majority leader—and decisively rejected Trump’s apparent favorite.
Narrow Republican majorities in the House and Senate could help—and frustrate—the president.
After a bruising election, many Americans may feel an impulse toward solitude. That’s the wrong instinct.
Striking out against injustice is always right; it always matters.