Harvard University’s Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy has long served as an anchor for the alliance between left-wing academia and mainstream media, prioritizing liberal narratives over objective reporting. The center conspires with ...
The late Democratic Virginia Rep. Gerry Connolly was, by all accounts, one of the kindest members of Congress, and he will be missed personally by his colleagues on both sides of the aisle. Normally, the ...
Here’s an idea: Maybe don’t trash people who have chosen national security as their life’s work late on a Friday afternoon of Memorial Day weekend. Secretary of State and acting national security adviser Marco Rubio ...
The brazen murder of two young Israeli Embassy staffers in DC was committed by a man on the radical left, but other than Jake Tapper, none of TV network stars could identify the shooter as ...
America’s manufacturing sector is in the middle of a high-stakes comeback. The Trump administration has placed renewed focus on reshoring production and growing our domestic industrial base, announcing policies designed to cut onerous regulations, promote ...
There is a judicial coup underway in the U.S., and the Supreme Court is refusing to stop it. Yet another unpunished hit to the Constitution happened this week when a federal judge in Texas ordered ...
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Democrats championed themselves as agents of truth. In a world of uncertainty, with information changing by the day, if not more frequently, they controlled the information the public heard and suppressed ...
Republicans in Congress don’t have to look far to save taxpayers money. As the Senate prepares to take up the reconciliation bill passed by the House, it should focus on the nation’s capital, which has ...
President Donald Trump’s speech in Riyadh was a drone strike on Western supremacism, “democracy-promotion,” and the “Arab Spring.” Like his 2020 “Vision for Peace,” which became the Abraham Accords, it was an invitation not an intervention. He ...
Here we sit, three days from the Super Bowl of American politics. For a year, your humble correspondent has been staring, unblinking, straight into the carnival-cum–melting-down reactor of American democracy. He has covered debates, speculated ...