Why is President Joe Biden harder on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu than he is on the terrorist leader of murderous Hamas?
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.
Vice President Kamala Harris was typically unprepared for her big Thursday TV interview, but Dana Bash bailed out the candidate by never pressing.
The Meta CEO’s reassurance, in a letter to Rep. Jim Jordan, comes years after the social media platform helped bury the Hunter Biden laptop story.
Kamala Harris’ chance to sway undecided voters was a bust. Her argument at the DNC was that she is a better person than Donald Trump.
Trump’s lack of discipline and self-control and unchanged, bullying ways have made him the star of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
Pronouns, protests, slights toward Israel and slams against Big Pharma: the Democratic National Convention takes the Windy City.
In his Monday farewell speech at the DNC in Chicago, Joe Biden went through a litany of woes in a manner that was downright Trumpian.
Kamala Harris is supposed to go from wallflower to firebrand — and convince Americans that she should be in charge after she spent three years being barely visible.
It’s a sad day when hints that the government should monitor interviews come from The Washington Post, the newspaper that broke the Watergate story.
Her latest campaign ad tries to sell the vice president as “tough” on the border. You can’t make this stuff up.
Come January, there will be an elected official in the White House who served in the military for the first time since George W. Bush was president.
Kamala Harris could have chosen a centrist. Instead, she picked a far-left governor who once said “One person’s socialism is another person’s neighborliness.”
At an Atlanta rally, Trump should have focused on tying Kamala Harris to Joe Biden’s worst policies. He went after Georgia’s popular Republican governor.
Did international prisoner swap transcend politics, or not? Hostages freed, families happy, Biden White House joyous, but Vladimir Putin happy, too.
As San Francisco’s district attorney, the vice president supported sanctuary cities and the enrollment of criminal illegal immigrants in job training.