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The New Republic
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Politics
March 28, 2018
Emily Atkin
The EPA’s “approved talking points” for climate change are scientifically incorrect.
March 28, 2018
Jeet Heer
Smearing Parkland Students Is a Symptom of the Right’s Ideological Exhaustion
Lacking strong arguments, conservatives have taken to labeling students as bullies and liars.
March 28, 2018
Matt Ford
Can the U.S. Supreme Court Stop Gerrymandering?
Waves of redistricting have allowed politicians to select their own voters, consolidating one-party power across America—mostly among the GOP.
March 28, 2018
Magazine
Win McCormack
Possession
How should we understand the history of political corruption in America?
March 28, 2018
Graham Vyse
Is Washington Ready for Another Betsy DeVos?
Republican Debbie Lesko is Arizona’s crusader for conservative “school choice”—and, unless Democrats can stop her in April's special election, she’s about to go national.
March 27, 2018
Sarah Jones
The Conservative Columnist Conundrum
On Kevin D. Williamson and the mainstreaming of the reactionary right.
March 27, 2018
Matt Ford
Retired Supreme Court justice calls for a repeal of the Second Amendment.
March 27, 2018
Magazine
Jeet Heer
America’s Disappearing Foreign Policy
What’s happening to the GOP’s global affairs brain trust?
March 27, 2018
Jeet Heer
,
Jo Livingstone
Is “Porn Star” the Best Way to Describe Stormy Daniels?
A conversation about the language the media uses for people at the intersection of sex work and politics
March 26, 2018
Sarah Jaffe
March For Our Lives Was About More Than Gun Control
Young activists took aim not just at firearms, but also at a system incapable of responding to demands for change.
March 26, 2018
Magazine
Karan Mahajan
After the Strongman
A coup in Zimbabwe brought down Robert Mugabe, a liberation hero who became a corrupt dictator. But can this mean the start of a real democratic era?
March 26, 2018
Alex Shephard
The End of “Too Big to Regulate”
Facebook and other tech giants convinced politicians that oversight stifled innovation. That's all starting to change.
March 23, 2018
Jeet Heer
Scarier Than a Neoconserative
John Bolton, the new national security advisor, is a radical nationalist—and has the skills to make Trump's foreign policy fantasies a reality.
March 23, 2018
Matt Ford
Congress may have just nixed a Supreme Court case on digital privacy.
March 23, 2018
Sarah Jones
The Pinkertons Still Never Sleep
The notorious union-busting agency has resurfaced in a telecommunications labor dispute, revealing how it has adapted to the 21st century.
March 23, 2018
Amar Diwakar
Saffron Curtain: How Buddhism Was Weaponized During the Cold War
The U.S. tried to foment an anti-communist Buddhist bloc in Southeast Asia—with deadly consequences for the region’s politics today.
March 22, 2018
Alex Shephard
John Bolton, who has advocated strikes against Iran and North Korea, is Trump’s new national security advisor.
March 22, 2018
Matt Ford
Footage of the fatal self-driving Uber crash raises new questions about legal liability.
March 22, 2018
Matt Ford
The Worst Job in Washington
Why can't Trump attract any of the nation's top lawyers?
March 22, 2018
Matt Ford
Body-cam footage shows Sacramento police killing an unarmed black man.
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