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‘Is It Too Late?’ Four Writers on What Democrats Should Do About Biden.
None of the options ensure victory against Trump — and some of them could badly split the party.
By Jamelle Bouie, Michelle Goldberg, Patrick Healy and Bret Stephens
I write about politics and culture from a left-leaning, feminist point of view, though I try to seek out stories that challenge my preconceptions. I’m particularly interested in the rise of authoritarianism in both America and around the world, the state of the progressive movement and the evolution of gender relations.
Before I joined The Times, I was a columnist at Slate, and my work has appeared in The New Yorker, The Washington Post, The Nation, The New Republic and many other publications.
My first book, “Kingdom Coming: The Rise of Christian Nationalism,” was about religious authoritarianism in American politics, a subject I’ve been reporting on ever since. It was a finalist for the Helen Bernstein Award for Excellence in Journalism. After that, I traveled to countries including India, Ethiopia, Nicaragua, and Poland to write “The Means of Reproduction: Sex, Power and the Future of the World,” a book about global battles over gender and reproductive rights, which won the J. Anthony Lukas Work-In-Progress Award and the Ernesta Drinker Ballard Book Prize. Next, in a detour from politics, I wrote “The Goddess Pose,” a book about wellness culture and the long Western fascination with Eastern spirituality as refracted through the story of the peripatetic Russian yoga evangelist Indra Devi.
In 2018, I was part of a team that won the Pulitzer Prize for public service for reporting on issues of workplace sexual harassment. That year I also won a Front Page Award from the Newswomen’s Club of New York for opinion/criticism. In 2020, I won the Hillman Prize for opinion and analysis.
I grew up near Buffalo, New York, earned my undergraduate degree at the State University of New York at Buffalo, and then received a masters of journalism at the University of California, Berkeley. I’m an on-air contributor at MSNBC and live with my family in Brooklyn.
As an opinion columnist, I don’t claim to be objective: My politics inform most of what I write. But I do strive, always, to be accurate and fair. In addition to getting my facts right — or running a correction if I don’t — that means never quoting people out of context, or omitting important information that might cut against an argument that I’m making. I don’t accept speaking engagements or payments of any kind from political organizations, and I make sure to disclose potential conflicts of interest. Like all Times journalists, I’m committed to upholding the standards of integrity outlined in our Ethical Journalism Handbook.
Facebook: Michelle Goldberg
Threads: @michelleinbklyn
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None of the options ensure victory against Trump — and some of them could badly split the party.
By Jamelle Bouie, Michelle Goldberg, Patrick Healy and Bret Stephens
We take a look at J.D. Vance, Marco Rubio, Doug Burgum, Tim Scott, Elise Stefanik and more possible Republican running mates.
By Ross Douthat, David French, Michelle Goldberg and Bret Stephens
The high stakes of Bowman’s primary make his carelessness especially frustrating.
By Michelle Goldberg
Democrats should rally around a bill to overhaul the 1873 anti-vice law.
By Michelle Goldberg
A Christian nationalist upset causes Republican angst.
By Michelle Goldberg
Hollywood shouldn’t pre-emptively capitulate to the MAGA movement.
By Michelle Goldberg
The MAGA movement tears another state Republican Party apart.
By Michelle Goldberg
Why the MAGA movement loves Mafiosi.
By Michelle Goldberg
Donald Trump’s second term would be even more corrupt and vindictive than his first.
By Michelle Goldberg
Donald Trump’s a felon now. That could make a difference.
By David French, Michelle Goldberg and Patrick Healy
In 2016, the campaign was deeply worried about it.
By Michelle Goldberg
In fact, his legal team’s arguments have always been internally inconsistent.
By Michelle Goldberg
Alex Jones, Steve Bannon and the left-to-right pipeline.
By Michelle Goldberg
A strange sense of anticlimax hangs over the Trump trial.
By Michelle Goldberg
Nellie Bowles’s new book fights the last war.
By Michelle Goldberg
Does the House speaker really know what it means to join Trumpworld?
By Michelle Goldberg
Kristi Noem’s memoir is the latest example of MAGA’s vice signaling.
By Michelle Goldberg
Authoritarians abroad often target NGOs. Don’t think it can’t happen here.
By Michelle Goldberg
The panic over pro-Palestinian protesters fuels illiberal legislation.
By Michelle Goldberg
Swing-state Republicans are running from the anti-abortion movement.
By Michelle Goldberg
He’s the only one allowed to be wobbly on abortion.
By Michelle Goldberg
The latest campus antisemitism hearing was a travesty.
By Michelle Goldberg
Alex Garland’s film isn’t nearly as apolitical as its critics say.
By Michelle Goldberg
The columnist Michelle Goldberg reports on Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s coalition of the alienated.
By Michelle Goldberg and Jillian Weinberger
His allies are planning to resurrect and enforce the 19th-century Comstock Act.
By Michelle Goldberg
Trump voters are picking up on his mix of New Age individualism, paranoia and intense nostalgia for the America of the 1960s.
By Michelle Goldberg and Michael Schmelling
Young people won’t escape social media misery without freedom in the real world.
By Michelle Goldberg
Republicans issue a subpoena over a resolution condemning the Gaza war.
By Michelle Goldberg
People spit out the word “Zionist” when they really seem to mean “Jew.”
By Michelle Goldberg
Mark Robinson has a history of anti-Jewish conspiracy theories. His party doesn’t care.
By Michelle Goldberg
It turns out it was easier for Republicans to indulge the movement’s maximalism when their voters didn’t have to live with the repercussions.
By Michelle Goldberg
“Help Wanted” proves authors needn’t be limited by identity.
By Michelle Goldberg
Gretchen Whitmer knows that abortion could decide the presidential race.
By Michelle Goldberg
Can he win back the state’s “uncommitted” voters in November?
By Michelle Goldberg
Michelle Goldberg on how a new activist campaign supporting a cease-fire in Gaza could hurt Biden in that swing state.
By Michelle Goldberg and Jillian Weinberger
Tuesday’s primary could offer a clue.
By Michelle Goldberg
The president’s frailty threatens his ability to do the most important part of his job: beating Trump.
By Michelle Goldberg
Poland voted out authoritarianism. Reproductive rights tipped the scales.
By Michelle Goldberg and Jillian Weinberger
Being in Warsaw was inspiring and sobering.
By Michelle Goldberg and Rafal Milach
It’s not just in America that abortion rights win elections.
By Michelle Goldberg
His return to the center of our politics won’t save the media.
By Michelle Goldberg
Sounding the alarm on “the utter bleakness.”
By Patrick Healy, Michelle Goldberg, Vishakha Darbha and Phoebe Lett
Republicans who think the country is going to hell have pushed it further in that direction.
By Michelle Goldberg
It will take a miracle to avoid a Trump blowout in Iowa.
By Michelle Goldberg
We need to stay outraged about the ex-president’s plot against America.
By Michelle Goldberg
Government ministers’ calls to depopulate Gaza implicate the U.S.
By Michelle Goldberg
To combat authoritarianism, first combat fatalism.
By Michelle Goldberg
A crisis of faith in the possibility of a better world.
By Michelle Goldberg
Kate Cox’s predicament exposes the lie behind anti-abortion groups’ claims.
By Michelle Goldberg
The nationwide uproar is likely to lead to a crackdown on pro-Palestinian speech.
By Michelle Goldberg
There’s a growing legal effort to define anti-Zionism as bigotry.
By Michelle Goldberg
No one embodies Trump’s fame-obsessed sociopathic emptiness like George Santos.
By Michelle Goldberg
Elon Musk has learned that ardent Zionism can be an alibi for antisemitism.
By Michelle Goldberg
A clash over the future of the Squad threatens the progressive coalition.
By Michelle Goldberg
Why both sides feel victimized by the campus debate over the war in Gaza.
By Michelle Goldberg
We’re in an especially repressive period for free speech.
By Michelle Goldberg
An explosion at a Gaza hospital reveals the danger of leaping to conclusions.
By Michelle Goldberg
Grief over Israel doesn’t mean we can look away from mass death in Gaza.
By Michelle Goldberg
Celebration of Hamas is both disgusting and self-defeating.
By Michelle Goldberg
By cooperating with Democrats, they could elect one of their own as speaker.
By Michelle Goldberg