![Graphic illustration with a black-and-white profile photo Donald Trump seen inside a color outline of the Supreme Court justices.](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/lmd94TDMX80bIxWU-P92-RsibnM=/155x0:1842x1125/210x140/media/img/mt/2024/07/Supreme_Court_Immunity_5/original.png)
The Supreme Court Puts Trump Above the Law
And gives him permission for a despotic second term.
And gives him permission for a despotic second term.
No matter the question, his answer is “illegal immigrants.”
Even some of his stalwart allies aren’t sure he should stay in the race.
Jamaal Bowman and the infantile style in American politics
The party that’s rallying around a convicted felon, whatever he may do, is the one to worry about.
Every theory of how Joe Biden could win has fallen apart.
America is left without any good option.
The tricky business of changing presidential candidates without tearing the party apart and losing the election anyway
Those who have cared for Biden the longest cannot allow him to continue.
The alternative is too horrible to contemplate.
Two presidential candidates argue about who’s better at hitting a ball. Nobody wins.
If he believes that Trump is a unique threat, the choice is clear.
Biden needs to step aside—for the sake of his own dignity, for the good of his party, for the future of the country.
The debate was a travesty—because its whole premise was to treat a failed coup leader as a legitimate candidate for the presidency.
Watching the president at the first debate was at times almost physically uncomfortable.
Trump’s denial of his own well-documented remarks is a tell.
The New York progressive veered too far left of his constituents.
Once again, he has reached into the back closet of history and dragged out one of our ugliest conceits.
Democrat Seth Moulton says his colleagues have lost the middle.
Trump’s political movement introduces the youngest voters to its kind of camaraderie.