Nobody does nothing as president, not even someone who watches television for five or six hours a day.
Biden’s choices say a lot about his theory of governing.
Some simple advice for anyone contemplating a holiday gathering: Wait until March.
The president is threatening to veto a military funding bill because it would rename 10 Army bases that honor Confederates.
The year 2020 shattered America’s shared reality.
Perpetual outsiders, Mormons spent 200 years assimilating to a certain national ideal—only to find their country in an identity crisis. What will the third century of the faith look like?
Three ways the outgoing president’s postelection fight changed the political landscape
A specious lawsuit against four swing states that was batted down by the Supreme Court was a victory for the man who filed it.
Like Jeff Sessions before him, the attorney general discovered that all that matters to Trump is personal loyalty, not ideology.
A lack of data instills trial-court judges with enormous, largely unrestrained sentencing power.
If Jill Biden wants to flaunt her Ed.D., who are we to object?
The justices’ decision not to wade into a sloppy coup attempt is no victory for rule of law.
Red ink isn’t a problem as long as the country is spending on the right things.
The defeated president tried to sow doubts about Georgia and other swing states that laboriously upgraded their voting systems, while safe red states keep using antiquated equipment.
To succeed in immunizing the population against COVID-19, the United States must draw on the resources it already has.
The pandemic ravaged America’s big cities first, and now its countryside. The public-health and economic repercussions have been felt everywhere.…
Nine months into the pandemic, government leaders can’t comprehend—or refuse to clearly say—what this virus is or how it spreads.
One hundred and six Republican members of Congress, and 18 state attorneys general, are asking the Supreme Court to overturn the election.
The president’s supporters believe that the votes of rival constituencies should not count—even though they understand, on some level, that they do.
A federal judge will decide next month whether the U.S. legal system treats presidential allies differently from presidential antagonists.