Trump's Grammatical Time Machine
The president-elect uses conditional grammar to craft self-fulfilling speculative historical fiction.
The president-elect uses conditional grammar to craft self-fulfilling speculative historical fiction.
Donald Trump has tabbed Howard Lutnick to be the next secretary of the Department of Commerce. He should also be the last.
Brendan Carr’s plans for "reining in Big Tech" are a threat to limited government, free speech, free markets, and the rule of law.
Trump's pick for attorney general is manifestly unqualified for the job, even without considering the salacious details of the ethics charges against him.
Both plans are an affront to America’s image as a nation of immigrants.
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"Reining in Big Tech," Brendan Carr says, requires scrapping liability protections and restricting moderation decisions.
His priorities may not be the drastic reforms that are actually needed.
Several Republican senators have said they are not inclined to abdicate their "advice and consent" role in presidential appointments.
The spread of conspiracy theories in response to a bruising electoral loss is not only found on the political right.
Establishment hawks will be running the State Department and National Security Council, but Trump has peppered in some antiestablishment mavericks too.
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The key reason America is so prosperous is because it has been the world's beacon of liberty, welcoming to immigrants and open to trade.
Congress and the president show no interest in cutting government. Maybe outsiders can get it done.
The nominee for attorney general passes the Trump loyalty test, but he lacks relevant experience and has repeatedly demonstrated poor judgment.
An administration staffed by Stephen Miller, Thomas Homan, and Kristi Noem will be punitive and authoritarian on this issue.
Even before the pandemic spending increase, the budget deficit was approaching $1 trillion. The GOP has the chance to embrace fiscal sanity this time if they can find the political will.
Gaetz is a loyalist, and that's the only qualification Donald Trump needs.
Narrowly understood, the president-elect's familiar-sounding plan to tackle "massive waste and fraud" may not give us "smaller government" in any meaningful sense.
Political scientists Hyrum and Verlan Lewis discuss the 2024 election and the power of self-narratives in American politics.
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Government agencies and officials can’t be trusted, so we should give them less to do.
The president-elect’s record and campaign positions belie Elon Musk’s talk of spending cuts.
The key issue in such cases is the motivation of the official who adopted by the policy, not who voted for him.
Trump's victory was narrow and largely caused by public anger at inflation and price increases.
Will the mercurial tech mogul put his thumb on the scale to help his own companies, or will he push for a broader deregulatory agenda?
As skyrocketing costs and mass exoduses define the Golden State, Democrats face a crucial reckoning.
Mike Waltz has called for a “credible military option” against Iran, wants to “take the handcuffs off” Ukraine, and regrets ending the "multi-generational war" in Afghanistan.
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Plus: A listener asks about Trump's early picks for cabinet positions.
Expect the incoming Trump administration to withdraw from the Paris Climate Change Agreement on Day 1.
Even without Mike Pompeo and Nikki Haley, the Trump administration still could be heading for regime change in the Middle East.
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Congress needs to reassert its powers and bring the imperial presidency back down to earth.
Neither Democrats nor Republicans seem fully able to wrap their minds around what's happening.
Much of the detail remains to be worked out, but lawmakers and corporations are already preparing.
Men and women vote differently, but 2024's gender gap was far from unique.
If Musk is truly serious about fiscal discipline, he'll advise the president-elect to eschew many of the policies he promised on the campaign trail.
Author and GOP strategist Patrick Ruffini discusses Trump's re-election and the ways in which the party is changing.
The justices, including Trump's nominees, have shown they are willing to defy his will when they think the law requires it.
The party put little effort into understanding the 2016 and 2020 elections, and now it's reaping the consequences.
A wave of anti-incumbent sentiment is sweeping major democracies, as establishment parties run out of ideas that voters like.
"It would help if we could regulate social media," said The View's Sara Haines.
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