What’s flying over New Jersey?
Look, up in the sky. It’s a bird, it’s a plane….
Charles Lipson is the Peter B. Ritzma Professor of Political Science Emeritus at the University of Chicago, where he founded the programme on International Politics, Economics, and Security.
Look, up in the sky. It’s a bird, it’s a plane….
The immediate challenges are the economy and the border. The looming, long-term challenge is to pare back the administrative state
Do conservatives have the edge with moderates in the trans-rights argument?
The fierce cultural battles at the heart of the Democratic Party’s future
A big agenda, replete with lessons from the first term
Sometimes, the best move is to let bad stories die
For Harris, it’s ‘he’s dangerous.’ For Trump, it’s ‘MAGA’
Nearly all Hamas’s senior leaders are dead. What comes next?
The network has abandoned journalist integrity for partisanship
When the president is unpopular, their vice presidents rarely win the top office
From our UK edition
The most important takeaway from the vice-presidential debate between Senator J.D. Vance and Governor Tim Walz is that this is what a serious debate for high office should look like. It was calm but impassioned, thoughtful, and truly helpful to any voter who wants to understand the policy differences between the two tickets. The candidates
Right now, the attack looks constrained
From our UK edition
32 min listen
America has a peculiar way of deciding national elections. Instead of a cumulative national vote, the president and vice president are determined by fifty separate state elections. The top ticket in each state (except Nebraska and Maine) receives all that state’s electoral votes, no matter how slim the margin of victory. Each state’s electoral votes
What comes next in the Middle East
A constitutional primer on picking the new president
From our UK edition
If Kamala Harris is elected president – and that’s a big ‘if’ since the race is still tight – she won it on the debate stage in Philadelphia on Tuesday night. True, her answers were often vague, but they were also inspirational and forward-looking. She avoided the ‘word salads’ that have so often marred her (rare) comments without a
What the candidates and moderators need to do and need to avoid
Now that Trump faces Harris, not Biden, he has failed to pivot his attack
Can she define her candidacy for voters before Republicans do it for her?