Making the click-through worthwhile: A deep dive into how President Trump’s outlook for 2020 is brightening, and how Democrats are giving him an exceptionally easy target; the Florida supreme court backs firing America’s least-favorite sheriff; and the Democratic donor class shifts from Beto O’Rourke to Pete Buttigieg.
Sabato Is Right. It Is Easy to See How Trump Can Win in 2020.
Larry Sabato greets Washington Post readers with a headline that many of them probably didn’t expect to see or want to see: “It’s easy to see how Trump can win reelection.”
Making the click-through worthwhile: A deep dive into how President Trump’s outlook for 2020 is brightening, and how Democrats are giving him an exceptionally easy target; the Florida supreme court backs firing America’s least-favorite sheriff; and the Democratic donor class shifts from Beto O’Rourke to Pete Buttigieg.
Sabato Is Right. It Is Easy to See How Trump Can Win in 2020.
Larry Sabato greets Washington Post readers with a headline that many of them probably didn’t expect to see or want to see: “It’s easy to see how Trump can win reelection.”
Congress has impotently outsourced its own judgment to lawyers, courts, executive branch bureaucrats, and, most importantly, to a public capable only of partisan outrage.
On the surface, statistics show significant school improvement after 20 years of education reform. But if you dig a bit deeper, the status quo begins to look a lot less desirable.
Oregon joined 20 other states in seeking a national injunction to block the Trump administration's proposed rule changes to Title X family planning program.
The behavior of many reporters and commentators in this young presidential cycle suggests that they have a newfound doubt about their ability to pick a winner.
The demands of the Extinction Rebellion are risibly overreaching and counterproductive. In fact, their demands could be realized only through an immediate economic overhaul by people who have yet to prove their competence.
Harris said that terrorists “should be deprived of their rights” just one day after saying she was willing to “have a conversation” about felon voting.