The issue neither candidate wants to talk about, let alone fix: the national debt, which is more than $35 trillion today and growing every year.
Debra J. Saunders
Debra J. Saunders joined the Review Journal as White House correspondent in December 2016, after 24 years writing a usually conservative opinion-page column for the San Francisco Chronicle. She has a B.A. in Greek and Latin from the University of Massachusetts at Boston, which may or may not prepare her for covering the Trump White House. She is syndicated with Creators Syndicate.
An internal email and Tony Dokoupil’s tough interview of author Ta-Nahesi Coates reveal the network’s institutional hostility to Israel.
Kamala Harris talked to Bill Whitaker. Yes, there were lame talking points, word salads and no Trump. But credit CBS for confronting her with facts.
Sen. JD Vance and Gov. Tim Walz had high, low moments in Tuesday’s vice presidential debate, but Vance dismantled the idea that he’s an unhinged wacko.
The vice president talks tough about illegal immigration now, but it’s too little, too late. The numbers say Biden-Harris made the problem much worse.
Axios asks Vice President Kamala Harris where she stands on the death penalty. And the answer is silence after years of flip flops.
Look at the signs and you see a crack in Virginia’s blue wall.
United Nations passes non-binding resolution telling Israel to end its “unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory” — by a 124-14 vote.
In a Virginia neighborhood that prides itself on tolerance, the GOP vice presidential nominee’s neighbors are anything but.
The vice president did a Friday interview with a Philadelphia news anchor and a Tuesday interview with a National Association of Black Journalists panel.
The Ohio city, thrust into the global spotlight by the presidential debate, has a big migrant problem. But the media would rather fact check Trump.
ABC News put a finger on the scale for Trump-Harris debate. Guess who it helped?
Who won? It might not matter to Americans, who want economic stability above all else.
It would be terrible precedent to imprison a president’s son. In this age of perennial political payback, punishment ultimately spawns reprisal.
Donald Trump and his running mate support in vitro fertilization, but you’d never know it if you listen to the Democratic ticket and The New York Times.