People in Great Britain felt their leaders weren’t treating them fairly. Politicians in the U.S. should take note.
America’s commitment to the rights of women, the former First Lady argues, obliges it to stay the course.
The Republican candidate is deeply unpopular, and his Democratic rival is promoting her own version of American nationalism.
GOP leaders have crafted an agenda that bears little resemblance to their presidential candidate’s stated vision.
The presumptive Republican nominee tries to draw a contrast between himself and Hillary Clinton, but both of them supported U.S. involvement in both Libya and Iraq.
A metaphor conceals the price paid by those who serve their country in times of war.
Many Europeans see the rise of Trump as part of a broad and disturbing trend towards far-right nativist nationalism.
Here’s what the New York Times Magazine’s story gets wrong.
It's easy to mock the Republican front-runner. But the “more serious” candidates he toppled don’t make a lot more sense.
The Republican front-runner delivered a formal address on his “America first” doctrine on Wednesday, TelePrompter and all.
The senator and the pope met on Saturday, the next chapter in a long-standing, unlikely alliance.
President Obama urges Cubans, and Raúl Castro in particular, to embrace democracy, open markets, and universal human rights.
As Obama visits the Caribbean country, views in Congress remain sharply divided.
Many think of aerial bombardment as a cheap, effective alternative to spilling American blood. They're wrong.
The Vermont senator seems far less likely to start a war of choice as president, but that doesn’t seem to count for much in the Democratic primary.
Hillary Clinton has suggested as much. Don’t be so sure.
Does the flow of new arrivals depress the wages of blue-collar American workers? It depends on how you measure.