Restoring Congress’s Brain
Adam Keiper · December 14, 2018 At a congressional hearing this week, Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) asked an irate and not entirely comprehensible question about his granddaughter’s iPhone. The only problem, as the tech exec who was the hearing’s sole witness explained, is that iPhones are made by Apple but the tech exec was the CEO…
France Reminds Us, Not For the First Time, That the Center Doesn’t Always Hold
Philip Terzian · December 14, 2018 Not for the first time, Americans appear to be slightly confused about events in France. The mass demonstrations that began as a protest against President Emmanuel Macron’s “climate-change” taxes gave comfort to conservatives here, and not without reason. The new levies on gasoline and diesel…
Let’s Not Repeat the Crime Waves of the Past
Fred Barnes · December 14, 2018 The hot cause right now is prison reform, and even lots of conservatives are on board. The Heritage Foundation put out an article with this title: “How This Criminal Justice Reform Bill Could Make Our Neighborhoods Safer.” My reaction: Have supporters of the bipartisan reform bill now before the…
Here’s How to Stop the Showboating Problem
Eric Felten · December 12, 2018 Transcripts.
The Power of Giving the Right Speech at the Right Time
Terry Eastland · December 7, 2018 How Edwin Meese saved originalism.
The Radio Talker Who Surprised Washington
Fred Barnes · December 7, 2018 This is the saga of Jason Lewis. For a quarter-century, the Minnesota congressman was a talk-radio host. He started in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolis and did a spell in Charlotte before returning to the Twin Cities. I was a guest on his show a few times. As best I recall, they were frisky…
Giving Bush His Due—Finally
Philip Terzian · December 7, 2018 To his credit, President Trump rose to the occasion on the death of George H. W. Bush. Among other things, his immediate response—on Twitter, of course—was a generous and eloquent tribute, mindful not only of the late president’s distinction but of his own obligation to the office he now inhabits.…
A Political Lesson Often Forgotten: There’s No Such Thing as an Overnight Transformation
Philip Terzian · December 4, 2018 I used to write a fair amount about West Germany and report on the federal elections. Like most American journalists, historians, political analysts, and politicians—and most Germans, for that matter—I could not imagine the collapse of the Soviet empire and the unification of the two Germanies.
President Trump’s Precarious Position
Fred Barnes · December 3, 2018 President Trump is in deeper political trouble than he thinks. And I’m not talking about whatever special counsel Robert Mueller has up his sleeve. Trump has real-life re-election trouble.
A Cutthroat Competitor Like Any Other
Christine Rosen · November 30, 2018 Facebook has had many moments of supposed reckoning in recent years. Is this one different?
Looking Back atBakke: Are Racial Preferences in Admissions Permanent?
Terry Eastland · November 28, 2018 This fall Harvard College has been defending its admissions program against charges of racial discrimination brought in federal court. Ironically, this is not the first time that Harvard’s admissions practices have lain at the heart of an important case that could affect college enrollments across…
Cotton versus the Trumps
Fred Barnes · November 27, 2018 What happens when the president's son and one of his closest allies spar over criminal justice reform?
When Politics Became Pop Culture
Andrew Ferguson · November 26, 2018 With Gary Hart, political journalists went from covering “the issues” as a public service to servicing the public with prurient material.
For Brexiteers, ‘No Deal’ Is a Better Option Than the Deal on the Table Now
Christopher Caldwell · November 26, 2018 One is hard put to see how a government commissioned to negotiate in good faith for independence could have come up with a deal quite this bad.
How the 2018 Election Was a Lot Like 1970
Philip Terzian · November 21, 2018 Since most political journalism tends to be wishful thinking, most of the post-midterm analysis this year followed predictable paths.
Bipartisanship Is Overrated
Fred Barnes · November 16, 2018 In two phone chats after Democrats won the House in the midterm election, Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell and likely House speaker Nancy Pelosi broached the subject of bipartisanship—or as McConnell put it, “ways we might be able to find a way forward.”
The ‘Blue Wave’ and the Problem With Metaphors
Barton Swaim · November 16, 2018 For a full year, maybe more, Americans who follow national politics were subjected to the unabating use of a single metaphor: the “blue wave.” Would there be a blue wave? If so, how big? What would the blue wave, if it turned out to be a wave, mean for the Trump administration?
Those Legendary Republicans of Yore, Beloved of the Media
Philip Terzian · November 12, 2018 My attention was caught last week by an op-ed piece in the Washington Post written by Chesley B. “Sully” Sullenberger III. Mr. Sullenberger, of course, is the pilot who skillfully maneuvered his disabled airliner to safety on the Hudson River, saving all 155 of its passengers and crew. His essay…
On the Trail With the New Mayor of North Beach
Matt Labash · November 12, 2018 This Election Day, like every Election Day, I entered the sanctum sanctorum of the voting cubicle, searched my conscience, remembered that I’d left it in the car, then voted for my own amusement. This time, I pulled the lever for a state-senatorial longshot named Jesse Peed. It felt exciting and…
Meanwhile, Back at the Governors’ Mansions: It Was a Good Night for the Democrats
Mark Hemingway · November 9, 2018 National party dynamics seemed to drag incumbents over the finish line
The Biggest Winner: Senator Mitch McConnell
Fred Barnes · November 9, 2018 Republicans lost the House but held the Senate in the midterm election. That puts Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell in the catbird seat.
Is There Really Nothing We Can Do About Mass Shootings?
Philip Terzian · November 2, 2018 The shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue—11 dead, 6 wounded—was especially shocking: It was the most lethal attack on Jews in American history. At the same it reminded us how disconcertingly commonplace mass violence has become. In February, 17 people were gunned down at a high school in Florida, and…
Divided We Stand: Expect More Vicious Partisan Battles Ahead
Fred Barnes · November 2, 2018 The polarization of American politics has done its work and we now have an especially ugly example of where it leads. I’m referring to the fight over the confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh as a justice of the Supreme Court.
Misunderstanding Merkel’s Legacy
“I wasn’t born chancellor,” said German leader Angela Merkel in an ad for her 2009 reelection campaign. She repeated the phrase in late October at a press conference to announce her coming resignation as chairman of her party, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU). Recent state elections have…
‘Socialism’ Is Popular Only Because People Don’t Know What It is
Tony Mecia · October 31, 2018 With a body count in the millions, you’d think it would be hard to rebrand.
Legal Group Racks Up Another Victory for Religious Liberty
Mark Hemingway · October 30, 2018 Courts are more often recognizing the arguments of religious-freedom advocates.
Italy’s Battle With the European Union Is About Much More Than the Budget
Italy’s coalition government came to power in May partly by winning an economic argument: The tight-budget “austerity” policies promoted by the European Union in the wake of the financial crises that began a decade ago were a sucker’s game, at least for slow-moving economies like Italy’s. Now the…
Nikki Haley and Her Illustrious Predecessors on the East River
Philip Terzian · October 24, 2018 I was awakened out of my reverie the other morning by a shocking news flash: Nikki Haley was resigning from her post as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations! According to initial reports, the envoy’s announcement was “sudden” and “unexpected” and “caught Washington”—certainly caught me—“off guard.”
How the Midterms Will Affect Congress's Investigations
Eric Felten · October 22, 2018 A Democratic takeover of the House will change things.
No Nobel Prize for Literature? Thank Goodness.
Robert Messenger · October 21, 2018 The Swedish Academy took the year off. Robert Messenger explains why we should be glad.
Handicapping the Prospects of aRoev.WadeReversal
Terry Eastland · October 19, 2018 Concluding her Senate floor speech in behalf of Judge Brett Kavanaugh—her vote for him was the decisive one—Republican Susan Collins expressed “her fervent hope” that he “will work to lessen the divisions in the Supreme Court so that we have fewer 5-4 decisions and so that public confidence in our…
What Trump Knows That Obama Didn’t
Fred Barnes · October 19, 2018 We now know why President Obama had to struggle so hard to spur the economy and allow it to grow more than 2 percent a year. And that was the high-water mark. In the last quarter of his presidency, growth had slipped to 1.5 percent. Today it’s obvious what Obama’s problem was. He had the wrong…
Who Will Lead the Democrats? Who Knows?
Philip Terzian · October 17, 2018 Looking ahead to 2020.
Gosnell: When the Truth Is More Gruesome Than Fiction
Mark Hemingway · October 15, 2018 The new film Gosnell: The Trial of America’s Biggest Serial Killer begins with a title card: “Most incidents portrayed are exact representations of court transcripts, police interviews, or eyewitness accounts.” Those familiar with the case involving the Philadelphia abortion doctor—and that’s not…
It’s Complicated: Facebook’s Shaky Status With Conservative Employees
Christine Rosen · October 12, 2018 Silicon Valley is often praised for its enlightened workplaces, with tech companies offering amenities such as yoga classes, free organic food, and nap pods. But Facebook employees evidently believe these corporate perks extend to the coddling of their personal political views. At least that’s one…
The Character Assassination of Brett Kavanaugh by the Cowardly Senate Democrats
Fred Barnes · October 12, 2018 In 1987, when Robert Bork met with Senator Edward Kennedy on the eve of his nomination as a justice of the Supreme Court, it was an awkward visit. Kennedy said his response would not be personal. He said that several times.
A European Union That Divides the British
Philip Terzian · October 8, 2018 What started as a rebellion in rural England over agricultural regulations has become a continent-wide quarrel about who governs whom.
Kavanaugh Conservatives vs. Booker Democrats
Years from now, perhaps only days from now, when people are no longer quite so inebriated with partisanship, those who wish Brett Kavanaugh well and those who wish him ill will probably agree on one thing: His defiant September 27 statement denying the charges leveled against him in the course of…
In Defense Of Lindsey Graham’s Righteous Rage
Barton Swaim · October 5, 2018 For anybody who wasn’t totally committed to the proposition that Christine Blasey Ford spoke only the literal truth about Brett Kavanaugh during her testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee, there were long stretches during Kavanaugh’s testimony that felt like a show trial. For hours we watched…
Gambling on Sports—It’s What Americans Want
Philip Terzian · October 3, 2018 But we tend to romanticize athletes and sports, and gambling will inevitably complicate relations.
The Sexual Revolution Is Over
Barton Swaim · September 29, 2018 At some point in the fall of 2017, when nearly every day brought news of another famous man disgraced as a result of allegations of sexual misconduct, I remarked flippantly to a liberal friend that the sexual revolution had not worked out the way we were told it would. “Oh, come on,” he responded.…
Just Another Reminder: Appeasement Never Works
Fred Barnes · September 28, 2018 There’s a worse way to deal with members of a restive voting bloc than fight them. It’s called appeasement. And yes, that’s the one that Republicans chose to boost Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.
Wurst Case Scenario: Merkel’s Coalition Calamity
Christopher Caldwell · September 25, 2018 Germany cannot decide whether migrants or xenophobes are a bigger threat.
The (Ever Slower) March of Time
Philip Terzian · September 24, 2018 On a bookcase in my office here at The Weekly Standard may be found a well-thumbed copy of a volume entitled Time Inc.: The Intimate History of a Publishing Enterprise, 1923-1941 (1968) by Robert T. Elson.
Trump Tries Something Surprising: Self-Control
Fred Barnes · September 21, 2018 Eyebrows were raised in Washington when President Trump responded to an allegation of sexual assault against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. The president didn’t mention the accuser. He said the Senate Judiciary Committee would go through “a process and hear everybody out [and] I’d like…
The Rise of the ‘Senior Officials’ and the Decline of the Presidency
Philip Terzian · September 19, 2018 The highest office in the land has become deeply bureaucratized.
Was Christopher Steele Disseminating Russian Disinformation to the State Department?
Eric Felten · September 14, 2018 When Christopher Steele was hired to compile his “dossier” on Donald Trump in 2016, he already had an extensive history of presenting private intelligence analysis to U.S. policymakers. The former British spy had for years been funneling reports on Russia and Ukraine to senior State Department…
Democrats Behaving Badly
Charles J. Sykes · September 12, 2018 Woke emotionalism is not a substitute for sober policy debate.
Harvard Admissions On Trial— The DoJ Joins the Game
Terry Eastland · September 12, 2018 The government says there is evidence strongly suggesting that Harvard may be engaging in 'racial balancing.'
Mailing It In: Say Goodbye to the Secret Ballot
Eric Felten · September 11, 2018 Voting by mail eliminates the privacy we've always known.
The Spy Who Drove Her: Dianne Feinstein and Chinese Espionage
Ethan Epstein · September 10, 2018 Beijing’s nefarious activities in the United States are very worrying.
The Strangest Progressive Project of All: Elevating John Dean
Philip Terzian · September 7, 2018 Political archaeologists will have plenty of specimens and fragments to examine in the aftermath of the Brett Kavanaugh hearings. The incivility that greeted the Supreme Court nominee was among the worst in modern times—no small achievement while the Haynsworth, Bork, and Thomas hearings live in…
Desperate Democrats
Fred Barnes · September 7, 2018 One of the most revealing moments in the Senate hearings for Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh involved Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.). He said Republican justices overwhelmingly side with corporations and right-wing interests in cases before the High Court. And so does Kavanaugh in his votes on…
The Romanian Ruse
Eric Felten · September 3, 2018 Lanny Davis, Michael Cohen, and the Steele dossier.
The Savage Way McCain’s Critics on the Left and Right United in His Death
Philip Terzian · August 31, 2018 Anyone inclined to believe that social media have hardened our public discourse will have found ample evidence last week, when John McCain died.
Nothing Good Ever Comes of a Special Counsel Investigation
Fred Barnes · August 31, 2018 Deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein made one of the worst decisions of the Trump administration when he named Robert Mueller “special counsel” to oversee the investigation of collusion between Donald Trump and Russia in the 2016 election.
The Erdogan Question: Is It Time To Shrink NATO?
Philip Terzian · August 28, 2018 The Turkish president's thuggish autocracy and reflexive anti-Americanism make him very popular in his country.
'A Deep Devotion to the Cause of Human Liberty'
William Kristol · August 26, 2018 How the late senator was like Henry Clay.
We Can’t Wait for Michael Cohen’s Inevitable Memoir
Andrew Ferguson · August 24, 2018 I’m not dropping a heavy hint to book publishers when I say I’ve been daydreaming this week about what it would be like to ghostwrite Michael Cohen’s inevitable memoir, set to appear—I’m guessing—in the fall of 2020.
Rand Paul, Russian Stooge
Stephen F. Hayes · August 21, 2018 What does the kooky libertarian see in the authoritarian Putin regime?
The Virtues of Concentrating the Mind
Barton Swaim · August 16, 2018 The news that Pope Francis has revised the Catechism of the Catholic Church to designate the death penalty “inadmissible” was greeted in the American media as evidence that the church is at last catching up with the times. That assessment, superficial though many Catholics will consider it, isn’t…
Brett Kavanaugh and the Haynsworth Precedent
Philip Terzian · August 15, 2018 Mitch McConnell has not forgotten the painful lessons of the Bork nomination.
Paul Manafort and the 'Torturers’ Lobby'
Andrew Ferguson · August 10, 2018 When potential clients crossed the threshold into his dark and paneled office not far from the White House, Clark Clifford would give them a little speech. Yes, he told them, he could offer them his “extensive knowledge of how to deal with the government on your problems.” And certainly he could…
We're Still Hearing Echoes from the Loud Family
Philip Terzian · August 8, 2018 I was a little surprised last week to learn that Bill Loud, patriarch of the Southern California family depicted in the first reality-television show (An American Family, PBS, 1973), had died—at the patriarchal age of 97. But of course, I shouldn’t have been surprised: A generation or more has…
Affirmative Reaction
Terry Eastland · August 7, 2018 In 2016 the College of Charleston ended the practice of considering race and ethnicity in admissions decisions—affirmative action, as it is called. The change went unnoticed in the college community until the Post and Courier, the local daily paper, reported it on July 29. Whereupon, almost within…
The FARA Faucet: Foreign Agents are Running Scared
Eric Felten · August 6, 2018 The first of a pair of Paul Manafort trials began this week in a courthouse in Virginia. The international lobbyist and onetime head of the Trump presidential campaign is charged with parking millions in cash offshore to evade taxes and otherwise launder his earnings. These are common enough…
Three Leaders Are Better Than One
Fred Barnes · August 3, 2018 Democrats have tried to block the House Intelligence Committee’s investigation of the FBI and its probe of the Trump presidential campaign. They have failed. And the Senate Judiciary Committee is investigating the actions of the FBI on its own.
A Novel Defense of Bad Social Psychology Studies
Andrew Ferguson · July 31, 2018 They may not be true, but they feel true.
The One Historical Sin That’s Always Forgiven
Philip Terzian · July 31, 2018 Spoiler alert: It's Stalinism.
He Drives Them Crazy
Fred Barnes · July 30, 2018 Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), the chair of the House Intelligence Committee, is an exception to the rule that committee chairs, male or female, are allowed to run things as they choose. Democrats, left-wing groups, and those who obsess about Trump won’t let him.
Russian Revenants: The Romanov Murders 100 Years On
What we can learn about modern Russia from a century-old massacre.
A Case of the Mondays
William Kristol · July 23, 2018 On Monday, July 9, President Donald Trump nominated Brett Kavanaugh to replace Anthony Kennedy on the Supreme Court. Kavanaugh is a serious and respected federal judge with a well-thought-through constitutionalist orientation. Based on what we know now, he deserves enthusiastic support from all who…
A Company That Bans Meat Deserves to be Grilled
Victorino Matus · July 23, 2018 Virtue signaling with quinoa and kale.
Trump’s Rules of Disorder
Fred Barnes · July 20, 2018 Politics is rarely edifying, much less elegant. And the mayhem over President Trump’s comments after meeting with Vladimir Putin and the response of his adversaries is an example of just how bad politics can get.
Veering on Script
Michael Warren · July 20, 2018 Is there anything with a shorter shelf life than the official talking points of the Trump White House? For Donald Trump, it’s the script to go off script, and any statement he makes today will be altered, contradicted, or undone tomorrow.
Will Kavanaugh Finally Give Us a Conservative Court?
Terry Eastland · July 13, 2018 So Brett Kavanaugh is now part of the story. Kavanaugh, from that part of the swamp known as Bethesda, Md., is President Trump’s nominee for the seat vacated by retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy. If Kavanaugh is confirmed, and if, as advertised, he is a constitutionalist, the country will be closer…
What the Yale Law School Freakout Says About the Opposition to Kavanaugh
Andrew Ferguson · July 13, 2018 When President Trump announced last Monday that he had chosen Brett Kavanaugh to replace Anthony Kennedy, his little speech rang out like a starter pistol. Instantly every activist, party hack, and ideological mainchancer bolted from the blocks, issuing petitions and press releases and formal…
Another win for The List
Peter J. Boyer · July 13, 2018 Subtlety not being Donald Trump’s customary approach to his job, his nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court was a surprisingly artful political play.
Donald Trump and the Return of Prescriptivism
Barton Swaim · July 13, 2018 On June 3, at 6:13 p.m., President Trump was evidently in a bad mood. He had heard or read one too many times that he uses bad grammar and eccentric capitalization. He tweeted:
Want to Defend Civil Liberties? Don’t Look to the ACLU.
Mark Hemingway · June 29, 2018 Wendy Kaminer is actively engaged in an unusual mission for a former board member of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU): warning the public that the ACLU has abandoned its commitment to defending free speech. Writing in the Wall Street Journal on June 20, Kaminer notes that a recent internal…
The Gosport Horror: a Hospital in Name Only
Christine Rosen · June 29, 2018 The staff at Gosport War Memorial Hospital in the U.K. had a nickname for the Daedalus Ward. They called it the “Dead Loss” ward because so many of the patients assigned to it died untimely deaths. From 1989 to 2000, it’s also where medical staff at the hospital pursued a mercenary policy of…
Did Turkey Gobble Up Democracy?
To judge from Western newspapers, the elections on June 24 in Turkey brought a crisis for democracy. The “crisis” is that Turks will continue to be governed by Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the perennially popular Islamist former mayor of Istanbul, for whom they voted overwhelmingly, and not by Muharrem…
Patriotic Readings
Andrew Ferguson · June 29, 2018 This Fourth of July, as is my wont, I will bring down from the shelf my well-thumbed copy of What So Proudly We Hail and therewith touch off a semi-controlled bacchanal of patriotism in my little household. I do this as a civic duty and to set an example for my countrymen. The indispensable Karlyn…
Trump Has My Thanks if He Ends the Worship of Presidents
Philip Terzian · June 29, 2018 When asked whether he intended as prime minister to offer the British public moral guidance, Harold Macmillan answered that if the people wanted moral instruction, “they should consult their bishops.” Macmillan wasn’t suggesting that people don’t need guidance, nor was he without convictions…
Anthony Kennedy’s Legacy: a Split Decision
Terry Eastland · June 29, 2018 Anthony Kennedy was not a great Supreme Court justice, but not a bad one either. If you were to rank the 113 justices so far, he would be somewhere in the middle, probably the upper middle. On the Supreme Court for 30 years, which is a long time as the lives of justices go, Kennedy, who will be 82…
A Strange Interlude, Indeed
Philip Terzian · June 22, 2018 I would be the first to concede that President Trump’s behavior at the recent G7 summit, while not unexpected, was certainly unconventional. In his patented way, the president seemed to waver between a breezy, hail-fellow-well-met manner and irritability, declining to endorse a summary declaration…
The Kadzik Affair: Clintonesque Corruption
Eric Felten · June 22, 2018 It’s a measure of how overabundant the scandal news is in the Justice Department inspector general’s report that the Peter Kadzik story has been pushed to the side. Maybe it’s because the Kadzik materials don’t start until page 461. Or maybe it’s that the Kadzik affair lacks the expletive-laced…
The New Cruelty
Charles J. Sykes · June 21, 2018 A Trumpian rubric for our times.
The Struggle to Drain the Swamp Will Never Cease
President Donald Trump was elected in 2016 in part on a pledge to “drain the swamp,” to eliminate the corruption that many Americans have come to believe dominates our politics. Here, Hillary Clinton served as a perfect foil, a stand-in for all the politicians who have gone to Washington to do good…
The Assassination Conspiracy Theories That Just Won’t Die
Philip Terzian · June 15, 2018 One of the pleasant surprises of this movie season has been Chappaquiddick, an account of the famous episode from 1969 in which Mary Jo Kopechne was left to drown in a car driven into a pond, and abandoned, by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. It’s not a perfect film by any means; but Kennedy is treated not…
France Learns a Hard Lesson About Immigration
Last week, France’s youthful and dapper president Emmanuel Macron swaggered into a battle of wits with the inexperienced and much-mocked lugnuts who run Italy’s new populist government. Macron was humiliated. That very same Italian populist government, meanwhile, threw down a gauntlet before half a…
Trump Does It His Way
Fred Barnes · June 15, 2018 In February, then-secretary of state Rex Tillerson was informed by a North Korean envoy that Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un wanted to meet with President Trump. Tillerson favored accepting the invitation quickly. Trump didn’t.
Deem Them Not Useless
Barton Swaim · June 8, 2018 One of the last laws in Europe banning abortion, Ireland’s eighth amendment, was decisively rejected by voters on May 25. The plebiscite’s result allows the amendment to be struck from the country’s constitution. Once that happens later this year, Irish women will no longer have to smuggle in…
Sympathy for the Wives of the Devilish
Noemie Emery · June 8, 2018 Poor Mrs. Weinstein, Mrs. Harvey Weinstein that is, estranged wife of the man who’s the King of the Hill atop a long list of sinners knocked off their thrones for having treated the females in their employ as slave owners once treated chattel on their plantations and lordlings once treated their…
Rediscovering Those Legendary Three-Martini Lunches of Yore
Philip Terzian · June 8, 2018 A writer in the New York Times Magazine recently fixed our present epoch in time as “a few decades after the heyday of the notorious ‘three-martini lunch.’ ” The gin-soaked midday meal, he explained, had been “an anachronistic ritual during which backslapping company men escaped a swallowing sense…
Trump Makes the Midterms Exciting
Fred Barnes · June 8, 2018 We have President Trump to thank for the noisy and exciting midterm elections. If John Kasich were president, the sound of the campaign would be zzzzzzzzz. Trump’s aides must have forgotten to tell him presidents aren’t on the midterm ballot. With luck, they’ll keep it a secret.
Italy’s Establishment Runs Out of Tricks
A political establishment of long standing always suffers from a kind of mental illness. No matter how unambiguously it is repudiated or how joyously it is driven from office, its members will continue to remember the episode as accidental, temporary, and unjust. This week in Italy such arrogance…
Remembering Gerald Ford
Fred Barnes · June 1, 2018 If you’re tired of being overwhelmed by the presence of President Trump, you’ve come to the right place. The subject here is Gerald Ford, the so-called accidental president who took over when Richard Nixon resigned on August 9, 1974, and served until January 20, 1977.
Legerdemain in Ukraine
How Russian journalist Arkady Babchenko was forced to fake his death.
Congressional Republicans’ Secret Weapon
Fred Barnes · May 25, 2018 Democrats are expecting a landslide in the midterm elections, and it’s lulled them to sleep on Capitol Hill. A case in point: Republicans have been using the Congressional Review Act (CRA) to wipe out Obama-era regulations since the Trump presidency began. And Democrats, responding groggily, have…
If you don’t like the results, democracy must be crumbling
Philip Terzian · May 25, 2018 It’s fitting that Sen. Elizabeth Warren should have chosen the Center for American Progress’s ideas conference to declare, as she did last week, that “democracy is crumbling around us.” For the death knell of democracy is one of her party’s oldest ideas, a staple of progressive nightmares from…
Italy’s deplorables unite against Europe’s elites
In March, Italian voters decided they had more to fear from corruption than from incompetence. Despite the warnings of experts, they voted overwhelmingly for two parties that want Italy to reclaim its sovereignty from the overweening European Union. One of those parties, the League, is on the…
Big Tech’s Fake Ethics
Christine Rosen · May 18, 2018 On May 15, Facebook released its first-ever “Community Standards Enforcement Report.” Despite its numbingly bureaucratic title, the report contains startling details about the scope of the challenge facing the company as it tries to monitor violent, extremist, and false content on its platform;…
Don’t Hold Your Breath: the Collapse of the Republican Party Isn’t Imminent
Philip Terzian · May 18, 2018 There were a handful of primary elections last week in Ohio, Indiana, and West Virginia, and while the results from Middle America were more or less predictable—“establishment” Republicans prevailed against some Trumpier-than-thou candidates—the headlines were revealing in their way: “Parties’…
In the Name of Convenience: U2 and the Irish Referendum
Mark Hemingway · May 18, 2018 On May 25, the people of Ireland are set to vote on repealing the eighth amendment of their constitution, which recognizes that children in the womb have a right to life. As you can imagine, this has sent a country long riven by passionate disputes over religion into a frenzied debate. Naturally,…
The Justice Department Stands Up for Free Speech
Terry Eastland · May 11, 2018 The Justice Department has won a small but significant victory in the campus free-speech case of Young America’s Foundation and Berkeley College Republicans v. Napolitano. Justice didn’t have to get involved in the case, but it did so and has helped the cause of free speech. Justice’s work in the…
The Wipeout of Obama’s Legacy
Fred Barnes · May 11, 2018 President Obama’s legacy is rapidly vanishing. The decision by President Trump to withdraw from the nuclear deal with Iran is the biggest blow, but it’s only the latest. The elimination of the individual mandate and canceling the yearly bailout of insurance companies have left Obamacare in a…
Do We Even Need a House Chaplain?
Philip Terzian · May 11, 2018 Paul Ryan’s attempt at institutional reform resulted only in sectarian and ideological strife.
Do We Want Our DNA to be an Open Book?
Last week, law enforcement officers in California arrested former cop Joseph James DeAngelo and charged him with committing a series of rapes and murders in California in the 1970s and 1980s known as the work of the “Golden State Killer.” The case has generated enormous attention beyond the…
There's No Easy Cure For What Ails Higher Education
Barton Swaim · May 4, 2018 Every week brings news of some fresh campus absurdity—tenured professors saying and doing idiotic things, students cursing and attacking speakers while college authorities do nothing about it, schools proudly denying students due process. When news circulated recently that Penn State has forbidden…
Talking to North Korea? Hope for the Best, Expect the Worst
Philip Terzian · May 4, 2018 Far be it from me to say whether Donald Trump’s diplomacy on the Korean peninsula entitles him to join Al Gore, Jimmy Carter, and Barack Obama among our recent Nobel Peace Prize laureates. But Condoleezza Rice is surely correct to suggest that the Trump administration—including ex-secretary of…
First the Victory, Then the Celebration
Stephen F. Hayes · April 27, 2018 “We suffered with Obamacare,” Trump said. “Make no mistake. This is a repeal and replace of Obamacare. Make no mistake about it,” he declared before pausing for a personal boast. “I predicted it a long time ago. I said it’s failing and now it’s obvious that it’s failing. It’s dead—it’s essentially…
Of the Making of Political Memoirs There is No End
Philip Terzian · April 27, 2018 By happy coincidence, on the very day that ex-FBI director James Comey published his self-serving memoir, my wife and I happened to be rummaging around in the George C. Marshall research library on the campus of Marshall’s alma mater, Virginia Military Institute, in Lexington. It was entirely…
Our Self-Obsessed, Parochial Press Corps
There’s nothing the media love more than a story about themselves. And if it isn’t about them, they’ll make it so.
Patrick Buchanan’s Strange New Respect for the Ayatollah
Charles J. Sykes · April 27, 2018 It’s springtime for Pat Buchanan.
Radio Free America
Ethan Epstein · April 27, 2018 Cumulus Media, the third largest terrestrial radio chain in the country, is bankrupt, and it’s making some drastic moves. Earlier this spring, it dropped Don Imus, the legendary—if now fossilized—morning host. And now there are rumors that Cumulus is looking to cut Michael Savage, one of talk…
Chick-fil-A and the Christian Infiltration
Barton Swaim · April 20, 2018 Even the headline of the short essay in the New Yorker was meant to offend, and it did: “Chick-fil-A’s Creepy Infiltration of New York City.” The piece, by Dan Piepenbring, has been read, attacked, defended, and ridiculed by far more people than ordinarily read the New Yorker. If the editors’ goal…
November 7, 2018
William Kristol · April 20, 2018 Political observers are understandably focused on November 6, 2018—Election Day. What happens then will be important for the next couple of years: a Democratic wave, carrying that party to control of the House for the first time since 2010, and perhaps even to a majority in the Senate? A strong…
It Would Be Nice if They Survive, but Are Newspapers Necessary?
Philip Terzian · April 20, 2018 Writers and editors at the Denver Post recently did what more than a few journalists have only dreamed of doing: They denounced their proprietor in the pages of the Denver Post. So audacious was their action that the gesture made the front page of the New York Times, which reported approvingly that…
Barbara Bush's Subversive Secret to Happiness
Andrew Ferguson · April 19, 2018 With the death of Barbara Bush, much, though maybe not enough, has been made of her once-famous commencement address to the Wellesley College class of 1990. Read today it has the feel of an antique. But her voice is strong in it, and she was always worth listening to.
FELTEN: The Blackmail Paradox Revisited
Eric Felten · April 13, 2018 I recently wrote in these pages about a conundrum that has long fascinated lawyers and legal scholars, the blackmail paradox (“You’ve Got Blackmail,” Feb. 5). If I know damaging information about you and that information was not acquired under privileged circumstances—that is, I’m not your priest…
HAYES: Paul Ryan and the End of an Era
Stephen F. Hayes · April 13, 2018 It’s fitting that Speaker of the House Paul Ryan announced his retirement during what was a very disturbing week in the White House, even by the chaotic standards that have prevailed under President Trump. Some suggested Ryan’s leaving means the Republican party has now become a Trumpist party. But…
ROSEN: Mr. Zuckerberg Goes to Washington
Christine Rosen · April 13, 2018 Facebook’s unofficial approach to violating the privacy of its users has always been “ask for forgiveness, not permission.” This week’s testimony by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg before a joint Judiciary and Commerce Committee in the Senate on Tuesday and the House Energy and Commerce Committee on…
TERZIAN: Anna Chennault and the Conspiratorial Mind
Philip Terzian · April 13, 2018 A touch of old Washington passed away March 30 with the death of 94-year-old Anna Chennault.