The Democratic Socialists of America come closer to power.
Farewell from a most grateful, very happy warrior.
Candidates for public office with an ounce of respect for themselves or their voters should reject this fad.
The NR editors discuss the state of the political scene each week. Join former prosecutor Andy McCarthy as he delves into the legal ins and outs of the latest Washington dramas with National Review ...
Educated Americans in 1775–83 could look back to the classics and see how those who overthrew Julius Caesar all perished. Familiar, as they would be, with the history of Britain, they would have noted ...
Washington, D.C. — Last year, something remarkable happened in the world of pediatric gender care. After years of handing out gender dysphoria diagnoses and medical interventions to children like ...
Aside from the plan being bad policy, Mamdani doesn’t exactly have the leverage he thinks he does. Immediately after he released his budget, the top two Democratic lawmakers on the city council who ...
In the face of EU chest-puffing, it shouldn’t be surprising that the U.S. is willing to take a fighting stance in Europe.
Government should not be able to decide which political candidates must and must not appear on broadcast television.
If the ballot initiative passes and the court rules in their favor, Democrats will benefit from a new map that gives them a ten-to-one advantage.
Politics alone suggests that one or both of the most senior justices should retire. But there’s always more to that decision.
Mr. Dalrymple, a retired doctor, is a contributing editor of City Journal and The New English Review. He is the author of False Positive: A Year of Error, Omission, and Political Correctness in the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results