Trump

  • Iran’s Protests and the Myth of Instant Solutions

    Iran’s Protests and the Myth of Instant Solutions

    On February 28, 2026, the United States & Israel conducted joint large-scale military strikes against Iran, hitting military and nuclear targets across cities including Tehran, Isfahan, Natanz, and Fordow. A number of key Iranian leaders have been killed, including Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Armed Forces Chief of Staff Abdolrahim Mousavi, and…

  • Trump’s Intel Stake Isn’t Socialism; It’s Common Sense

    Trump’s Intel Stake Isn’t Socialism; It’s Common Sense

    President Trump’s decision to seek government equity and revenue sharing in major chip companies, including a 9.9 percent non-voting stake in Intel and proposed deals with Nvidia and AMD, has sparked rare, intense bipartisan backlash; a sign of deep controversy surrounding direct government involvement in the tech sector. Sen. Rand…

  • From Resistance to Reshaping: The Right’s Transformation  of Federal Bureaucracy

    From Resistance to Reshaping: The Right’s Transformation of Federal Bureaucracy

    When historians examine pivotal transitions in American governance, Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal stands as perhaps the most consequential transformation of the federal government’s role in American life. Yet nearly a century later, the American right has undergone its own transition—from a movement defined primarily by opposition to expansive government…

  • Upholding Democracy: January 6, Colorado, and Trump

    Upholding Democracy: January 6, Colorado, and Trump

    In December 2023, Colorado decided to ban former President Donald Trump from primary election ballots due to his role in the disturbing events that occurred at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. The decision was later overturned in March 2024, when the Supreme Court unanimously decided to restore Trump…

  • Turkey and the Trump Philosophy

    Turkey and the Trump Philosophy

    The United States and Turkey have a long history of political cohesion, and no era was ever so prolific in deal-making for the allies as that of the Trump administration. After nearly two decades of carving away at his country’s democratic freedoms, Turkish President Recep Erdogan has aligned with the…

  • Debunked: The Plainspoken Populist

    Debunked: The Plainspoken Populist

    In 2015, The Boston Globe famously reported that Donald Trump spoke at a fourth-grade level. The future president’s 2016 announcement speech scored a 4.1 on linguistic tests, meaning a fourth-grade student could understand his speech. By contrast, Hillary Clinton scored 7.1. The results came as no surprise: political scientists and commentators have…

  • Trump and COVID-19: 5 Election Scenarios

    Trump and COVID-19: 5 Election Scenarios

    President Trump shocked the nation last week when he announced that he tested positive for COVID-19. Reports of the president’s medical treatment suggest that he is suffering from serious symptoms, throwing an already chaotic election season into further disarray. Meanwhile, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s move to create a Commission on…

  • Replacing Ginsburg Will Pull Court Right

    Replacing Ginsburg Will Pull Court Right

    The passing of renowned liberal Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Friday Sept. 18 immediately sparked a heated conflict over her potential successor. The current Supreme Court is ideologically split, and Supreme Court justices receive lifetime appointments, so Justice Ginsburg’s successor will likely decide our generation’s most defining issues.…

  • The Lefts, Mexico, and Latin America: A Conversation with Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas

    The Lefts, Mexico, and Latin America: A Conversation with Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas

    Biography: Mr. Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas Solórzano is the son of late Mexican President and Mexican Revolutionary General, Lázaro Cárdenas del Río. He has been a Mexican Senator, Governor of the State of Michoacán, and the first democratically-elected Mayor of Mexico City. In 1988 he split with the PRI and launched the…