The Atlantic Daily
David A. Graham, Will Gottsegen, Tom Nichols, and colleagues guide you through today’s biggest news, ideas, and cultural happenings. Sign up for the newsletter here.
David A. Graham, Will Gottsegen, Tom Nichols, and colleagues guide you through today’s biggest news, ideas, and cultural happenings. Sign up for the newsletter here.
This week’s Tesla shareholder vote could give the world’s richest man more money and more control.
State and city elections are now heavily intertwined with what happens in Washington.
Canada’s anti-tariff ad was an incursion in the trade war, but there’s another reason it may have bothered Trump.
In wringing its hands over how to win elections, the party is ignoring the more foundational question of what it believes in.
Roughly 42 million Americans may not get their SNAP benefits on Saturday.
Americans don’t have to imagine what attempts to subvert an election could look like, because it’s already happening in one state.
You don’t need a political-science degree to understand why wealthy individuals cutting secret checks to the president to pay the military is a bad idea.
These films won’t swindle you out of a good time.
The recent pardon is an overture to an industry that has made the president millions.
It just goes on and on, my friends.
What is it about the president’s supporters and group-texting that keeps resulting in fiascos?
The Amazon outage revealed just how consolidated the web has become.
Huge demonstrations won’t translate into immediate political results, but there’s a reason the president is so bothered by them.
The industry is being transformed in the era of YouTube video essays and TikTok screeds.
A week of ostentatious bigotry in American politics
The king of precious metals is having a good run right now. That might be a problem.
Five movies for viewers who want to try something new
Trump’s quest for retribution is remaking the department.
The Georgia representative is finding a new voice.
Political leaders once watched their language. Now they delight in using obscenity.