The Supreme Court Steps Back From the Edge
It’s impossible to see the court’s decision upholding a law disarming domestic abusers as anything but an exercise in institutional self-preservation.
By Linda Greenhouse
It’s impossible to see the court’s decision upholding a law disarming domestic abusers as anything but an exercise in institutional self-preservation.
By Linda Greenhouse
Both parties are changing shape. What should they do about it?
By Thomas B. Edsall
Two political experts weigh in on what it might take to succeed.
By New York Times Opinion
We believe the prime minister is driving Israel downhill at an alarming speed, to the extent that we may eventually lose the country we love.
By David Harel, Tamir Pardo, Talia Sasson, Ehud Barak, Aaron Ciechanover and David Grossman
Our kids’ lingo is not only better than any we used; it’s a useful window into the way they think.
By Stephen Marche
Universities that cataloged election lies and disinformation are being targeted with the same tactics they sought to uncover.
By Renée DiResta
Thursday’s debate is time to preach to the choir.
By Elizabeth Spiers
Going head-to-head with the former president is like juggling nonsense, blather and bluster.
By Hillary Rodham Clinton
I’ve studied voter reaction and opinions about every presidential debate since 1992. This is what to do and not to do.
By Frank Luntz
Saying goodbye to Rascal, the little rescue dog gone too soon.
By Margaret Renkl
The modest campaign created an opening for today’s anti-L.G.B.T.Q. backlash.
By Omar G. Encarnación
We live in an age when people can live longer and healthier even with significant health conditions. What does this mean for future presidents?
By Daniela J. Lamas
The island’s power crisis illustrates the consequences of putting essential services in the hands of a private entity.
By Yarimar Bonilla
A pop diva inspires and unites fans in ways that few other cultural figures can. Which is why we should all be rooting for Celine Dion.
By Elamin Abdelmahmoud
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He has the lowest level of corporate support in the history of the Republican Party.
By Jeffrey A. Sonnenfeld
It is looking more and more like a project to universalize the un-universalizable.
By Christopher Caldwell
What are we to do with this privileged pop star?
By Jennifer Weiner
Imagining what comes next in the Republican effort to spread the Christian word.
By Christopher Buckley
Olympic hopefuls are a group of exceptional people held together by athletic tape and hope, who leap without sight of where they will land.
By Charlotte Drury
Laws aren’t keeping pace with the risks climate change poses to workers laboring under sweltering conditions.
By Terri Gerstein
Rubio would offer Latinos the chance to vote for one of their own to be a heartbeat away from the presidency.
By Michael LaRosa
We had a chance to treat sex categories in sports with curiosity and compassion instead of condemnation. We still can.
By Michael Waters
The administration should have a consistent vision on immigration instead of ping-ponging between border harshness and beneficial half measures for some of the undocumented.
By Pablo Alvarado
They need to stop accepting short-term victories.
By Sarah Isgur
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In a second Trump presidency, expect a return to backroom lobbying deals that favor well-financed companies and countries and exclude everyone else.
By Brody Mullins and Luke Mullins
It shouldn’t take so long for the justices to consider an outlandish claim.
By Leah Litman
What does the rise of partisan sectarians portend for the rest of us?
By Thomas B. Edsall
Compulsory labor with little or no compensation should be unthinkable.
By Andrew Ross, Tommaso Bardelli and Aiyuba Thomas
Glenn Kramon discusses the coincidences that led him to realize how critical immigration was to his recent cancer battle.
By Glenn Kramon
Here’s who needs to worry right now.
By Jennifer B. Nuzzo
Invoking Nazis and pogroms in discussing the Hamas attacks is wrong and offensive and helps the Israeli government avoid responsibility for its failures.
By Jonathan Dekel-Chen
Everything Donald Trump knows about picking a running mate in 2024 he learned while hosting “The Apprentice.”
By Ramin Setoodeh
There were no trees. There was no road. I was the trees, and I was the road. That darkness was like no darkness I’ve ever known.
By Margaret Renkl
Hospital outpatient departments, or HOPDs, are encouraging a surprise scourge on medical costs. It’s patients who bear the burden.
By Danielle Ofri
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It’s time for decisive action to protect our young people.
By Vivek H. Murthy
They are breaking the compact between ordinary people and those in whom power is vested.
By Martin Griffiths
Listening to the stories of voters on their thresholds, we felt their need to trust.
By Lea Page
New challenges to the Supreme Court’s image of probity and detachment seem to keep coming.
By Linda Greenhouse
Many parents see themselves in the president’s affection for his son.
By David Sheff
New science reveals parenting is transformative for men.
By Darby Saxbe
To win a union campaign, workers need a strong organizing committee and a hammer to enforce the right to organize. The law is not that hammer.
By Jaz Brisack
The experience of living with my father’s dementia ranged from tragic to tragicomic to vaudevillian, often within the span of a few minutes.
By Cornelia Channing
After a profound national rupture, forgiveness may be impossible. But the long-overlooked act of oblivion could offer a solution.
By Linda Kinstler
“When you live in the past, the people around you hate you, don’t understand and don’t accept you,” Valentyna Odnoviu wrote.
By Frankie Mills
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A secret file kept on my dad is now a reminder of a man who, even under pressure, stayed true to his beliefs.
By Samuel G. Freedman
A politician’s defamation case against a small Pulitzer Prize-winning news organization is designed to drain its financial resources.
By Adam Ganucheau
In Cimarron County, Okla., the voters and the community have a lot more going on than just adherence to Trump.
By Scott Ellsworth
A peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine will stop the killing and in the long run make Ukraine better able to defend itself and democracy.
By A. Walter Dorn
His remarks should not have been controversial.
By Marc O. DeGirolami
The leading companies are co-opting Silicon Valley’s traditional cycle of disruption.
By Mark Lemley and Matt Wansley
The U.S. Treasury secretary explains why America and its allies should unlock the value of Russian capital immobilized at the start of the war to give Ukraine the financing it needs.
By Janet L. Yellen
In calling snap elections, Emmanuel Macron has taken a dangerous gamble.
By Cole Stangler
It was never going to be easy to get voters to abandon their hero.
By Thomas B. Edsall
Factory farming increases the risks for epidemics.
By David Quammen
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A cease-fire deal in Gaza might halt a war between Israel and Hezbollah.
By Mairav Zonszein
Success isn’t an Instagrammable skyline.
By Philip Oldfield
Tesla shareholders must reject the chief executive’s unorthodox compensation package to help turn him back into the visionary we need to fight climate change.
By J. Bradford DeLong
Never has the country looked less like a leader and more like the head of a faction.
By Stephen Wertheim
It has nothing to do with law or politics.
By Patti Davis
Only one approach is likely to hold out anything more than the slimmest of hopes for the former president.
By Roger L. Stavis
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