Michael Cohen may land some serious blows on Trump
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The most promising avenue of inquiry may be Trump’s business dealings, if that’s even the appropriate word
Jacob Heilbrunn is editor of The National Interest. He lives in Washington DC
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The most promising avenue of inquiry may be Trump’s business dealings, if that’s even the appropriate word
From our US edition
The president wants to deliver peace in our time in Asia
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As Dan Coats’s stock is plummeting, Mueller’s could be rising with the mercurial commander-in-chief
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Coulter may not ‘decide policy’, but does she command the base?
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Foreign policy might be the only sphere in which Trump can try to bolster his sagging ratings
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The Amazon and Washington Post mogul has thrown down the gauntlet to the National Enquirer
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It was essentially a recitation of his greatest hits
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Do Trump’s detractors really want him to take a more active role in the White House?
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If enough Republican senators decide that Trump is a political liability, then his goose is cooked
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His failure to procure a single cent for a border wall is already enraging his erstwhile supporters on the right
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He’s certain to enjoy the melée of media attention surrounding his arrest
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Her new book is a serviceable tract attesting to the ambition, grit and sheer cunning of its author
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For Republican lawmakers, the question will not be whether but when to abandon the president they have so sedulously shielded for the past two years
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Was his admission an attempt to prepare the ground for the President’s retreat?
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His thirst for martial acts suggests that he wants to wage a war against Iran, one that would result in regime change
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Leading Republicans are unwilling to confront the President about the perils of the course he has chosen
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You drum up a bill of particulars, and, voila, impeachment hearings begin
Is Mitt Romney the mouse that roared? Or does he pose a real threat to President Trump? In his Washington Post op-ed, Romney bludgeons Trump: ‘the president has not risen to the mantle of his office.’ Move over Elizabeth Warren. It looks like the real civil war will be in the Republican, not the Democratic, party. Romney
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Trump supporters may continue to hope for a grand revolution in American affairs, but Trump himself is focused on sublunary matters
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The longer he’s cooped up in the White House, the crazier his pronouncements become