At the Chicago convention, the party rediscovered its faith in institutions.
If the party doesn’t figure out how to compete in more states, perpetual GOP dominance is all but assured.
The Senate GOP elected John Thune as majority leader—and decisively rejected Trump’s apparent favorite.
The cool factor of cigarettes has proved hard to shake.
Turkish women’s rights are in a precarious state. But feminists are pushing back and achieving real victories.
“The consensus that we would do this, that we would all do it, gives us cover that we wouldn’t be labeled as liberal or too soft on defendants.”
With its ruling in the Ward Churchill case, a court has effectively given the university's board of regents the power to fire whomever they want, whenever they want, for unpopular political speech.
We are witnessing a reordering of American life not seen in half a century.
The party’s signature election-reform bill faces long odds in Congress, in part because of the problems it seeks to address.