The campaign pledge. The executive orders. The unintended consequences. The finger pointing. The flip-flop.
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.
Washington could deliver the first LGBTQ judge on the 4th Circuit and the first Muslim judge on any federal appeals court — and their first jobs on the bench.
A convicted killer demands a more humane method of execution. He got it. Now the Biden White House finds it “very troubling.”
Many young voters — including a number of Democratic political staffers — side with Hamas terrorists over the pluralistic democracy of Israel.
There was another primary in New Hampshire on Tuesday, and President Joe Biden can’t lose it, even with his approval rating at a record low.
Three drownings at the Mexican border are not a whodunnit — and yet, at House Oversight Commitee hearing, the blame game was in rare form.
Big media couldn’t wait to pronounce Donald Trump the winner of the Iowa GOP caucuses. Yes, his poll numbers are huge. And it feels like 2016 all over again.
Organized retail shoplifters should scare you. They know security cameras are recording them. They don’t care and they don’t expect real consequences.
The president’s son is under the skin of House Republicans. And House Democrats see nothing wrong with the “for sale” sign around his neck.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas doesn’t want voters to blame the president for record migrant encounters on the Mexican border.
Confronting antisemitism and plagiarism has been deemed an exclusively “conservative” cause, and academics should consider themselves forewarned.
Four prosecutors have charged former President Donald Trump with 91 crimes, and his polls numbers among GOP voters keep soaring. Et tu, Maine?
After more than 30 years in journalism, including four years covering Donald Trump for the Review-Journal, White House correspondent Debra J. Saunders is taking a break.
Former President Donald Trump teased that he may run for president in 2024 when he spoke to his most ardent supporters at the Conservative Political Action Conference.
House Democrats asking broadcasters about whether they will continue to carry Fox News Channel show they don’t care about free speech.