Trump Didn’t Win Pennsylvania. Kamala Harris Lost It.
One day before the presidential election, Vice President Kamala Harris made her first campaign visit to Reading, Pennsylvania — a majority Latino...
Read MoreA Song on Porcelain
Czesław Miłosz lost his homeland to a Stalinist regime. What have we Americans valued in our own cultural past that might now feel lost or...
Read MoreDan Crenshaw: Europeans can boost defense spending or 'shut up' on Ukraine negotiations
Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, said that Europeans complaining about not carrying more weight in negotiations to end the conflict in Ukraine need to...
Read MoreTulsi Gabbard Walks Back Foreign Surveillance Criticism But Defends Snowden in Testy Confirmation Hearing
Gabbard's path to Senate approval as intelligence director is uncertain
Read MoreDonald Trump throws President Zelensky out of White House and ends talks
Hopes of a peace deal to end the war in Ukraine lay in tatters last night after a spectacular public row between Donald Trump and Ukrainian President...
Read MoreFebruary consumer confidence posts biggest drop since 2021 in latest sign of slowing economy
Consumers grew more pessimistic about the economic outlook in February as worries brewed about a slowing economy and rising inflation, the Conference...
Read MoreHarris Ran to Trump’s Right on Immigration — and Gained Absolutely Nothing For It
Just six weeks after Joe Biden’s inauguration, 80 House Democrats urged the newly sworn-in president to immediately renew diplomatic engagement...
Read MoreRubio plays down immediate breakthrough on Russia-Ukraine peace
Top U.S. officials headed Sunday to Saudi Arabia for talks with Russian diplomats in the coming days on ending Moscow’s three-year war on Ukraine,...
Read MoreVoters Overwhelmingly Chose to Protect Abortion — Even When They Didn’t Choose Harris
In every state where it was on the ballot on Tuesday, protecting abortion care received more votes than Vice President Kamala Harris. This was true...
Read MoreDonald Trump’s Cabinet of Revenge
Tulsi Gabbard, Kash Patel, and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., bobbed and weaved around senators’ questions, but their own words came back to bite them.
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