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The New Republic
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Politics
March 15, 2018
Sarah Jones
What do Susan B. Anthony’s List and Nancy Pelosi have in common?
March 15, 2018
Emily Atkin
Did Scott Pruitt start the rumor that Scott Pruitt might become attorney general?
March 15, 2018
Suzanne Monyak
Nothing can convince Donald Trump that the U.S. doesn’t run a trade deficit with Canada.
March 15, 2018
Alex Shephard
Facebook Has a Genocide Problem
A U.N. report on Myanmar's campaign against the Rohingya reveals the ways in which oppressive regimes can use social media for ill.
March 15, 2018
Alex Shephard
Philippe Reines has a curious theory for how Democrats can win in 2020.
March 15, 2018
Sarah Jones
Donald Trump Is the New George W. Bush
The rehabilitation of the worst Bush-era offenders underscores that Trump represents a continuity—not a break—with the past.
March 15, 2018
Joshua Mound
Resolving the Democrats’ False Choice
How the party can win both the “missing Obama millions” and the Obama-to-Trump voters
March 15, 2018
Marcy Wheeler
Congressional Oversight of the Intelligence Community Is Broken
The response to the Russia investigation and Gina Haspel’s CIA nomination reveals a watchdog complicit in protecting the president from accountability.
March 14, 2018
Jeet Heer
The Trump Curse Is Real
The Republicans' excuses for their likely loss in Pennsylvania don't hold up to scrutiny.
March 14, 2018
Sarah Jaffe
A Party Within the Democratic Party
The Congressional Progressive Caucus is mapping out not only its principles, but also a strategy for taking power.
March 14, 2018
Emily Atkin
“Organic” Doesn’t Mean “Humane,” and Trump Likes It That Way
Obama issued a rule to help confused consumers. His successor killed it.
March 14, 2018
Alex Shephard
The 2018 midterms are looking great for Democrats: A continuing series.
March 14, 2018
Sarah Jones
Is it the end of the white nationalist Traditionalist Workers Party?
March 14, 2018
Sarah Jones
How Public Schools Became a Battleground in the Trump Era
It’s not just that schools are fighting low funding and mass shootings. They’re also some of the last genuine public squares in this country.
March 14, 2018
Erik Loomis
How Trade Deals and Immigration Laws Hurt Workers—Mexican Workers
Much has been made of the very real woes of American workers. But Mexicans are trapped in an especially brutal cycle of dependence and exile.
March 14, 2018
Robert Wright
The Case for Cautious Optimism About the Trump-Kim Summit
North Korea won't denuclearize, but the chances of a massively lethal calamity will drop.
March 13, 2018
Jeet Heer
You’ll Miss Him When He’s Gone
Rex Tillerson may have been the most ineffective secretary of state, ever. But his chosen replacement, Mike Pompeo, is an extreme hawk.
March 13, 2018
Matt Ford
More than two dozen criminal cases have been dropped because a police officer beat a jaywalker.
March 13, 2018
Jeet Heer
A Tale of Two Women, and Two Eras
Why Monica Lewinsky was widely vilified and Stormy Daniels has been praised or ignored
March 13, 2018
Suzanne Monyak
Was Rex Tillerson canned for pointing the finger at Russia?
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