Politics
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Editorial: Trump's broadband moves save billions
Even government programs can get strangled by red tape.
Think back to 2021. That’s when President Joe Biden signed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. It directed more than $1 trillion toward transportation and infrastructure projects. That included more than $42 billion to expand broadband internet.
“Access to high-speed internet ...Read more
Commentary: Why workplace well-being AI needs a new ethics of consent
Across the U.S. and globally, employers—including corporations, health care systems, universities, and nonprofits—are increasing investment in worker well-being. The global corporate wellness market reached $53.5 billion in sales in 2024, with North America leading adoption. Corporate wellness programs now use AI to monitor stress, track ...Read more
Editorial: Only in Chicago, do you get targeted for 'leaking' a public meeting
People who want to keep secrets for one reason or another often detest leaks to the media. Naturally, we’re hardwired to oppose that petulant and shortsighted approach to American life, but within such realms as law or business, there can be valid arguments for enforcing secrecy through confidentiality agreements and investigations.
Sometimes...Read more
Commentary: America's 'Common Sense' revolution
While Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence turned the smoldering embers of rebellion into the glorious fireworks of independence and revolution, it was a short pamphlet published six months earlier, in January 1776, that ignited the colonies’ revolutionary zeal and crowded out any notion of rapprochement with Britain.
Thomas Paine...Read more
Commentary: Diversity has become a dirty word. It doesn't have to be
I have an identical twin sister. Although our faces can unlock each other’s iPhones, even the two of us are not exactly the same. If identical twins can differ, wouldn’t most people be different too? Why is diversity considered a bad word?
Like me, my twin sister is in computing, yet we are unique in many ways. She works in industry, while ...Read more
Commentary: The DOJ suing for voter data is dangerous on many levels
Uncle Sam wants you. And now he wants your voting data, too.
The law — and long-standing policy — say he shouldn’t get it.
The U.S. Department of Justice has filed lawsuits in 23 states and the District of Columbia seeking access to detailed voter information for the purpose of building a national database. The department’s demand sets...Read more
James Stavridis: Trump's big, beautiful battleship is a sitting duck
Even before using a U.S. Navy armada to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, President Donald Trump had big ideas to remake the service in his image. At a glitzy Mar-a-Lago rollout last month, he announced a new “Trump class” of battleships, ostensibly to lead a 21st-century “Golden Fleet.” Is this bold — and very expensive — ...Read more
Andreas Kluth: If Rubio is America's superego, Stephen Miller is the id
The American attack on Venezuela to snatch-and-grab its dictator was many things: militarily masterful, legally cynical, strategically and morally warped, and entirely uncertain in its ultimate outcome for Venezuela, the Western Hemisphere and the world. It also was and is devastatingly revealing about the foreign-policy apparatus of this White ...Read more
Editorial: Real food belongs at the base of the food pyramid
Those battling chronic illness know what a long, difficult battle it is to get well again, understanding all too well that old sentiment, You don’t realize how important your health is until you lose it.
Today, too many Americans live sick. They’re fighting rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, multiple sclerosis, diabetes. Many are battling cancer...Read more
Commentary: The year's new political fault lines are already forming
That escalated quickly. We’re barely into 2026, and events are already unfolding that could meaningfully reshape the political landscape.
The death of Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mother and U.S. citizen who was shot and killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis on Wednesday, has the potential to shake the ...Read more
Ronald Brownstein: The Supreme Court could give the GOP a political lifeline
The GOP’s best chance of defending its narrow, five-seat majority in the House of Representatives in 2026 — and beyond — could come from an upcoming Supreme Court decision on the Voting Rights Act.
From any angle, Republicans face difficult odds in November. No party has successfully maintained unified control of the White House, the ...Read more
Editorial: RFK Jr.'s reckless vaccine experiment puts children at risk
In a single stroke, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. achieved a long-standing goal of his anti-vaccine supporters — and put millions of American children needlessly at risk.
On Jan. 5, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it is narrowing the childhood vaccine schedule — considered the baseline of care for all children �...Read more
Editorial: Slashing foreign aid risks millions of lives
The White House announced last January that waging war on the “foreign aid industry and bureaucracy” would be among its first orders of business. Unfortunately, many other rich-country governments are following its lead. If current and planned cuts to foreign aid stand, the cost could be millions — repeat, millions — of lives lost.
No ...Read more
Abby McCloskey: Backing away from the Hyde Amendment is a big deal
The anger among conservatives about President Donald Trump’s comments on the Hyde Amendment, which bars federal funds from being used for abortion, is not insider Beltway baseball. It’s not a splinter in the MAGA coalition, generously salted by mainstream media outlets. It’s a historic departure on one of the clearest moral issues in ...Read more
Trudy Rubin: Trump's imperial Venezuela policy based on lies and delusions
No one should mourn for Nicolás Maduro, and the U.S. military extraction of the Venezuelan dictator was a military tour de force.
Those are the only two positive things to be said about President Donald Trump’s latest made-for-TV foreign operation, which has squandered American guns and taxpayer money on a lunatic venture based entirely on ...Read more
Commentary: The United States is better off as a global power than a global bully
The United States has abandoned respect for state sovereignty — the bedrock principle of international politics. The events of this week and brazen statements of President Donald Trump’s administration have made clear that the attack on Venezuela was not an isolated event justified on a specific set of facts, but rather an abrupt ...Read more
Anita Chabria: Newsom offers a sunny view of California to combat Trump's darkness
In a State of the State speech that largely ignored any talk of the big, fat budget black hole that threatens to swallow the California dream, Gov. Gavin Newsom instead laid out a vision of the Golden State that centers on inclusivity and kindness to combat Trump's reign of darkness and expulsion.
In a week dominated by news of immigration ...Read more
Editorial: A needless death in Minneapolis
Every last American should agree the death in Minneapolis of a 37-year-old American mother of three at the hands of a gun wielded by an agent of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is an abomination, an indicator of domestic crisis and, we fear, a harbinger of yet worse to come.
When armed, hardened, stressed and poorly trained ICE and ...Read more
Editorial: The killing of Renee Nicole Good and the moral rot of Trump's reckless immigration enforcement plan
Renee Nicole Good, 37, was shot and killed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents on Wednesday in Minneapolis. She is the second person killed after the Trump administration unleashed masked, armed, and increasingly unaccountable federal forces upon U.S. cities.
Unless the government immediately changes course, she will not be the ...Read more
Editorial: Let justice system work in Minneapolis shooting
Minneapolis remained on edge as demonstrators took to the streets to protest of the fatal shooting of a woman at the hands of federal immigration officers. CNN reported that law enforcement officers Thursday fired “pepper balls” toward people marching near a federal building.
The woman has been identified as 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good, ...Read more




















































