Justice officials are obviously trying to insulate Jonathan Ross from accountability. And four senior career people couldn’t take it anymore.
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To complement The New Republic’s March 2026 issue, "What Should the Democrats Do?" our writers examine how the Democrats can reestablish themselves as the party of and for the people, hone their messaging, and push the electorate to be more progressive.
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Trump’s fixation on filching the island territory from Denmark may seem like the demented ravings of a mad king. But to a cohort of plutocrat weirdos, it makes perfect sense.
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When a Trump supporter refers to ICE as the "gestapo," a door has definitely opened. Will Democrats charge through it?
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The Massachusetts senator is right that her party is too beholden to the donor class. How on earth could anyone dispute that? And yet …
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The public is coming around to the notion that the agency has to be eliminated. Fortunately, this administration and its Supreme Court allies have made that incredibly easy.
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Join a special group of readers and supporters on a lovingly designed, all-inclusive tour of one of the most spellbinding places in the world. Drawing on The New Republic’s special contacts among local historians, artists, and chefs, we’ve created a first-class experience that will immerse you in Cuba’s colorful and unique history, politics, and culture.
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As Trump floods the zone with mendacity, more and more people are tuning out the news to avoid him. We need a fresh approach.
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As the Iranian people mount a furious protest against the nation’s hostile regime, some voices defame their bold resistance as serving the ends of imperialism.
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By Adrienne Mahsa Varkiani
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Alaska’s Mary Peltola’s candidacy changes things. And even if they can’t pull it off this year, they could take steps toward a 2029 majority—with a Democratic president and House.
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In a startling development, some of President Trump’s advisers have suddenly realized that unleashing heavily armed government militias on American cities to terrorize American citizens with abandon just might be a tad unpopular with Americans.
Yep, it’s true. Axios reports that Trump’s team recently viewed private polling that shows "support for his immigration policies falling," raising concerns about Trump’s "confrontational enforcement tactics." Some advisers are talking about "recalibrating" that approach.
Which means it’s apparently necessary to state the following point: No recalibrated or sanitized version of the assault that Trump and Stephen Miller are waging on American cities right now, most prominently Minneapolis, is available to them or anyone else. That’s because it’s a campaign of deliberate terror: The policy is the terror, and the terror is the policy.
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Liberal foreign policy expert Matt Duss describes why Trump’s foreign moves are so erratic and how the next Democratic administration should approach foreign affairs.
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Right Now With Perry Bacon
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