Election laws telling citizens whether, and how, theycancommunicate with other citizens to facilitate voting are constitutionally suspect: Our view
Author: The Editorial Board, USA TODAY
Following Donald Trump’s political playbook, too many Democrats crowd presidential race
In the 2020 election, long-shot candidateshope Electoral College lightning could strike again. For others, campaigning is brand burnishing: Our view
Robert Mueller speaks, but this shouldn’t be his last word on Donald Trump
Allowing the special counsel who led the Russian investigation to avoid testifying on Donald Trump would send the wrong message to witnesses: Our view
President Trump, don’t rob Pell Grants to fund NASA’s moon(shine) program
Man has been to the moon six times in the last 50 years. Yet DonaldTrump wants tuition aid diverted to retake giant leap for mankind: Our view
Donald Trump pardoning war criminals on Memorial Day would be desecrating a holiday
Commander in chief Donald Trump, for the sake of U.S. military order and discipline, don’t act on those accused or convicted of war crimes: Our view
Donald Trump, put on your billionaire britches and act like a president
Who’s afraid of Nancy Pelosi? By walking out on House speaker and Sen. Schumer, the ‘leader’ of the free world looks weak and outmatched: Our view
Donald Trump is a big booster of fossil fuels, so why are their stocks slipping?
With carbon dioxide at a record 48% over preindustrial levels, the public and investors grow increasingly worried about climate change: Our view
How Trump’s immigration plan could migrate from doubtful to doable
A bigger skilled immigrant pool is good policy. But instead of sharply cutting family-sponsored immigration, scrap the ‘diversity lottery’: Our view
Commander in chief Donald Trump, threatening ‘official end of Iran’ is not the endgame America needs
Tweets like ‘If Iran wants to fight, that will be the official end of Iran’ won’t prepare Americans if saber rattling turns sobering reality: Our view
How the Trump prescription for drug prices transparency could make health care well again
Requiring pharmaceutical manufacturers to disclose drug costs in television ads might stimulate debate on who pays for what: Our view