Politics
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Commentary: History will be kinder to Joe Biden than the pollsters
Now that pollsters are declaring President Joe Biden a “failure,” historians will reckon with too many economic signals rendering the prevailing narrative little more than media noise.
From the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 that ushered in the longest period of unemployment below 4% since the 1960s to the Infrastructure Investment and ...Read more
Editorial: Putin's weaker than he looks. Seize the opportunity
Russian President Vladimir Putin has sought to project an image of economic strength while prosecuting the war in Ukraine, as if he could easily outlast the West’s efforts to counter his aggression. If President-elect Donald Trump and other Western leaders want to negotiate a prudent peace deal, they shouldn’t buy it.
More than most ...Read more
Tad Weber: Elon Musk thinks high-speed rail is wasteful? Cutting funds would be the crime
Sacramento-area congressman Kevin Kiley took to the floor of the House of Representatives recently to declare the following:
“Mr. Speaker, I am very happy to report that the newly formed Department of Government Efficiency has honed in on perhaps the single-greatest example of government waste in United States history,” the Republican from ...Read more
Editorial: Drone phenom sheds light on feds' transparency flaws
It seems everyone has a theory on the nocturnal drone sightings that have alarmed residents in the Northeast. They’re from our government, they’re from a foreign country, they’re planes, they’re just normal drones, they’re extraordinary craft that elude regular detection.
One thing we are sure of: The Biden Administration has dropped ...Read more
Editorial: Trump is guilty and not immune -- His Stormy Daniels hush money conviction remains
Even a terribly wrong-headed decision by the U.S. Supreme Court on a president’s post-White House criminal immunity can’t undo Donald Trump’s 34 felony convictions correctly ruled Acting Manhattan state Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan.
You remember Merchan, who oversaw Trump’s Stormy Daniels hush money trial downtown in the spring ...Read more
Commentary: Supreme Court ruling on trans care is literally life or death for teens
Last month, the Supreme Court heard arguments on whether banning essential health care for trans youth is constitutional. What the justices (and lawmakers in many states) probably don’t realize is that they’re putting teenage lives at risk when they increase anti-trans measures. A recent report linked anti-transgender laws to increased teen ...Read more
Dan Rodricks: Luigi Mangione and where we are now
In February 1992, chicken magnate Frank Perdue received a pie in the face from a protester in a chicken costume during a meeting of the University of Maryland Board of Regents in Baltimore.
Perdue was founder, president and CEO of one of the nation’s largest poultry processors. More than that, he was the face of the poultry industry because ...Read more
Editorial: Trump lawsuits, threats a clear and wrongheaded effort to bully the press
It’s wrong for the incoming president to start suing newspapers and it’s a transparent effort to bully the press, but there Donald Trump stood Monday, proclaiming that “we have to straighten out the press. Our press is very corrupt. Almost as corrupt as our elections.”
Neither the press nor elections are crooked, but Trump is now suing...Read more
Editorial: Haiti desperately needs a new, bigger UN mission -- and American leadership
As Haiti endures a devastating crisis marked by escalating violence and lawlessness, urgent international intervention is required to address the growing chaos. With President Joe Biden preparing to leave office and Donald Trump poised to take power, the need for decisive action is clear.
Haitians are enduring unprecedented levels of brutality....Read more
Robin Abcarian: The latest evidence that putting RFK Jr. in charge of public health would be a disaster
Polio came for 5-year-old Lynn Lane when she was visiting her grandmother in rural Indiana. Suddenly, her arms and legs became weak, and by the time she got to a hospital in Indianapolis, she was totally paralyzed and in respiratory failure. Lane spent the next several months in an iron lung.
"I don't really remember too much about that," Lane,...Read more
Commentary: Here's what is so unusual about the Wisconsin school shooting -- and what isn't
The Dec. 16 shooting at Abundant Life Christian School in Madison, Wisconsin, has shocked the nation, not only for its horror but for its unique profile. This time, a teenage girl opened fire inside her school, killing a teacher, another student, and apparently herself, and injuring six others. Although female school shooters are exceedingly ...Read more
Editorial: Idaho doesn't have to accept that some form of school vouchers is inevitable
Much of the discussion around the issue of using taxpayer dollars to help families send their children to private schools has centered on coming up with a compromise, because it’s inevitable this is the year — finally — that Idaho legislators approve some form of taxpayer-funded private education.
It’s a tempting position to take: “...Read more
Editorial: Biden's 'kids for cash' clemency is offensive to victims, and to justice
The commutation of the prison sentence of former Luzerne County judge Michael Conahan by President Joe Biden is a disgraceful act that dishonors the children and families victimized by the judge and his accomplice, Mark Ciavarella, during the notorious "kids for cash" scandal two decades ago.
It is a particularly bitter irony that the scandal ...Read more
Commentary: If South Korea's president is impeached, who should replace him?
Last weekend, South Korea’s Congress passed an impeachment bill for President Yoon Suk Yeol.
While the constitutional court of Korea is expected to deliver a final verdict within 180 days, the odds are not in the president’s favor due to his imposition of martial law and adverse public opinion. Following the court’s ruling, South Koreans ...Read more
Commentary: The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has irked billionaires, but it serves the public well
The billionaire Elon Musk and the California venture capitalist Marc Andreessen have started a debate about the role of government that we should be having — but it might not go the way they would hope. They don’t like government agencies that stop corporations like theirs from ripping off consumers.
They especially hate the 14-year-old ...Read more
POINT: Biden must take urgent action to maintain our democracy
In his first campaign ad of 2024, President Joe Biden asked the question over images of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and January 6 rioters: “What will we do to maintain our democracy? History’s watching.”
For one last month, Biden retains the responsibilities and powers of the nation’s highest office. If he believes his words, he must ...Read more
Editorial: Drinking is up nationwide, so pace yourself over Christmas and New Year's
This holiday season, whether you raise a toast, or spike the punch or have a drink to take the chill out of your bones, do so thoughtfully.
Alcohol may make the seasonal celebrations feel more festive. A drink or two may seem to comfort those whose holidays aren’t particularly joyful. But increasingly, Americans are drinking more than they ...Read more
Karishma Vaswani: The Trump-Xi bromance has a chance in 2025
Xi Jinping and Donald Trump's bromance could be rekindled in 2025, if both sides play their cards right. This is positive and would help create the right environment for an improvement in ties between the two superpowers, but timing and tone are everything. The economic rivals will need to give and take to prevent the relationship from getting ...Read more
Gearoid Reidy: Yoon's impeachment widens East Asia fault lines
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, impeached at the second time of asking, was always more popular abroad than at home.
Just over a year ago, he was holding hands with Japan’s former Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and President Joe Biden at a historical trilateral summit at Camp David; a few months before that, Yoon was feted at the White ...Read more
Commentary: How we can resist Trump's deportation plans
Throughout his 2024 campaign, Donald Trump promised mass deportations of the more than 11 million unauthorized immigrants in the United States. Those of us on the ground who work with immigrants are apprehensive about what that will look like and how we can respond.
During the first Trump administration, I was part of local organizations ...Read more