Opinion · 117th Congress
The year that the last congressional week has been
This was a week that perfectly summarized 2022: Legal problems for Donald Trump and a chaotic Congress stumbled to its conclusion.
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This was a week that perfectly summarized 2022: Legal problems for Donald Trump and a chaotic Congress stumbled to its conclusion.
House Republicans vow to investigate all things Hunter and Joe Biden. But there are other issues begging for their oversight.
He came within 546 votes of defeating Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert, but Frisch is looking on the bright side.
Over the past two midterms, the last presidential election and other events, signs of Trump’s growing weakness are undeniable, Rothenberg writes.
Kyrsten Sinema seems to understand that looking ahead, independents are the voters to watch when it comes to both parties’ chances in 2024.
From clinging to the outdated Electoral Count Act to investigating Hunter Biden, the party is working against itself.
House Republicans, far from being chastened by a disappointing midterm campaign, seem to be all in supporting Donald Trump.
Lindsey Graham tried to set up Herschel Walker as some kind of Pied Piper luring African Americans to his party. It didn’t work.
Why did Herschel Walker lose the first time? He should have won — but it wasn’t about mail-in ballots or election malevolence.
Columnist Stu Rothenberg looks back on the year that was and hands out awards to candidates, campaigns and pollsters.
Not even dinner with a proud antisemite can cause some Republicans to break up with Donald Trump, but why did Joe Biden decline to slam him?
This is not who we are? Hate has no place in the GOP? Think again. Republicans are embracing white supremacy.
The best way to permanently contain the virus is for Congress to keep spending money. President Joe Biden isn’t asking for much.
Donald's Trump hold over the Republican Party could be loosening. He remains a force, but voters sent a clear message in the midterms.
Forget the conventional wisdom about forward-thinking Republicans. The script may have flipped with these midterm elections.
What can we learn from the 2022 midterms? Independents don’t respond well to attack ads — and strategists care too much about the base.
The 2022 midterm elections were indeed a choice, not a referendum, an aberration that benefited Democrats in House and Senate races.
Speaker Pelosi wants "healing" across a divided country, but Donald Trump's political movement feeds off the opposite.
Stacey Abrams spent an inordinate amount of time swatting down the idea that Black men didn’t like her. But Blacks aren’t the problem here.
Remember all the conventional wisdom about how first term presidents lose big in their first midterms? Never mind.