Opinion · 118th Congress
Meet 2023’s politics, even more dramatic than 2022’s
The messy Republican fight over the next House speaker is a reminder that, despite a new year starting, there is no bottom in U.S. politics.
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The messy Republican fight over the next House speaker is a reminder that, despite a new year starting, there is no bottom in U.S. politics.
He also called the Mar-a-Lago dinner meeting “reckless” but questioned if it “merit[s] the media coverage it has been given.” If there is one thing Trump covets, it is media coverage.
His path back to the White House, with its likely immunity from prosecution(s). “Tyrants.”
While Democratic President Harry S.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s famous “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” after all, was a generous yet robust rebuke to fellow faith leaders who urged patience not action in pursuit of justice.
Joe Manchin’s opposition to HR 1’s Senate counterpart, S 1, highlights the importance of alternative routes for reform. One of those paths is at the state level.
Andrew S. Clyde, the same Clyde seen — mouth open and terrified — helping to barricade the besieged doors that day.
Democrats are pushing bills, HR 1 and S 1, that are antithetical to free and fair elections, not to mention First Amendment rights.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s 1963 “Letter from Birmingham Jail” chided the predominantly white religious leaders who urged caution rather than nonviolent demonstrations, who were more devoted to “order” than
Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, quoting selective passages about content of character.
The declaration built on the U.N.’s founding promise to promote and encourage “respect for human rights and for fundamental freedoms,” ideals that sadly, 70 years on, are being casually violated, from
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez insist they’re not for capital “S” socialism, but if socialism means a living wage, health care for all, and affordable or free education, then what’s so wrong with that?
a Republican Party, whose leader has doubled down on noxious rhetoric about minorities, immigrants of color and women and prompted censors to think up new ways to record his reported comments about “s-hole
The targets included some of the chambers’ most powerful Democrats — House Speaker Thomas S.
Roll Call Columnists on Tuesday's Primaries -