Editor-in-Chief Teddy David ('22) explains the past, present, and future of the Senate filibuster, and why it matters for our politics.
The final 2020 presidential debate struck a more civil and substantive tone, but it is unlikely the change the state of the race going into its final week.
The second debate of the 2020 election cycle was more sedate than the first presidential matchup, but it will have similarly little impact on the race.
Illustration by Editorial Cartoonist Adlai Brandt-Ogman ('21). A chaotic first debate of the 2020 election highlighted polarization and is unlikely to have changed much of anything heading towards November.
Trump consistently trails state and local leaders, as well as his own health officials, in approval polls as Americans look elsewhere for steady pandemic leadership
The 78-year-old democratic socialist is on his way to losing his second presidential race in a row. Should he hand the reigns of the movement he built to a younger successor?
A breakdown of the 2020 Democratic primary in the run up to Super Tuesday
The once-popular Maine Republican's vote to acquit Trump may be the last straw for Pine Tree State voters.
The billionaire former mayor of New York City has only been running for two months, is skipping the first four primaries and was initially viewed as a long shot. That's no longer the case.
A glimpse at Kentucky's transition from the divisive Bevin administration to Democrat Steve Beshear's potentially unifying
Adam Abadi argues that the importance of political skill for the 2020 nominee
Managing Editor Teddy David argues that conservatism gets a bad rap from liberals when it comes to compassion.