I Know What America’s Leading C.E.O.s Really Think of Donald Trump
He has the lowest level of corporate support in the history of the Republican Party.
By Jeffrey A. Sonnenfeld
He has the lowest level of corporate support in the history of the Republican Party.
By Jeffrey A. Sonnenfeld
Can liberal justices reclaim judicial restraint?
By Linda Greenhouse
The Biden administration seems to be in denial about China’s staggering advantage.
By David Wallace-Wells
Some of Biden’s new tariffs targeting China make sense. But others seem motivated by a desire to outflank Trump in Rust Belt swing states.
By Steven Rattner
The liberal arts are fading just when we need them most.
By Ezekiel J. Emanuel and Harun Küçük
We need to be prepared to fight the next war, not the last one.
By John M. Barry
Electric vehicles shouldn’t be a luxury item, but Biden’s tariffs mean they may remain so.
By Gernot Wagner and Conor Walsh
Gotham’s 400th birthday calls for a celebration worthy of the great metropolis it is.
By Kenneth T. Jackson
China’s economy has reached a dead end. Getting out will mean more trade friction with the United States.
By Anne Stevenson-Yang
We must be able to create a more civic-minded internet, with tools that would empower users to better control what they see.
By Ethan Zuckerman
With its TikTok bill, Congress sent a message to the world: You cannot disregard basic internet norms and expect to be treated like any other country.
By Tim Wu
Don’t bet the house on a rosy future.
By David Brooks
The return of Trump to the White House would be disastrous for the planet.
By Stephen Markley
The nuclear industry has a long history of failing to deliver on its promises.
By Stephanie Cooke
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An economist explains why his lens makes him so much more optimistic about the state of our economy than the average American.
By Justin Wolfers
He insisted on the value of working with those we disagree with.
By Cass R. Sunstein
Biden’s opposition to Nippon Steel’s purchase of U.S. Steel is pernicious political posturing.
By Roger Lowenstein
Most Latinos are not rootless, illegal transients as some citizens may think, but a force for American progress.
By Marie Arana
While Trump’s economic policy had serious flaws in his first term, the prospect of what he could do in a second term is frightening.
By Steven Rattner
If the Supreme Court sides with social media platforms in NetChoice v. Paxton, that will jeopardize our ability to control our own future.
By Tim Wu
Carve the names of climate change deniers deep and large, so that those who come after us need not search the archives.
By Nate Loewentheil
The divide between classes can’t be healed with economic remedies alone.
By David Brooks
The city is rewriting its antiquated zoning code. We should seize the chance to create a metropolis of opportunity that evolves with the times.
By Cara Eckholm
The gig economy is expanding and exploiting more workers.
By Terri Gerstein
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What will it take for the airline company to recover?
By Bill Saporito
Information about climate risks is becoming increasingly valuable to companies that want to sell it.
By Justin S. Mankin
The justices should leave it to federal agencies to resolve ambiguities Congress creates when it writes laws those agencies enforce.
By Jody Freeman and Andrew Mergen
The surprising friendship that has made Donald Trump’s trade policies so durable.
By Farah Stockman
Condescending to Trump voters will not win many of them over; we should not shrink from honestly assessing economic performance under Trump as well as under Biden.
By Roger Lowenstein
The jobs require advanced skills but not necessarily advanced degrees, especially in emerging high-tech fields like A.I., electric vehicles and robotics.
Expanding herds of cashmere goats are causing severe damage to grasslands on the Mongolian plateau in Central Asia.
By Ginger Allington
The idea that free markets can solve societal problems and that climate change can be fixed without regulation is a ruse.
By Auden Schendler
The act of working needs to become more affordable and accessible.
By Tressie McMillan Cottom
Community hospitals have been caught doing some surprising things, given how they are supposed to serve the public good.
By Amol S. Navathe
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Default settings on devices allow the tech industry to keep collecting and using data as it wants.
By Zeynep Tufekci
Silicon Valley has immersed us in an expensive, pervasive and perennially annoying type of automated capitalism.
By David Mack
In a break from the past, the Western world’s wealthiest people no longer try to support the societies they live in.
By Guido Alfani
The Justice Department has been losing ground in the fight against financial fraud for years.
By Ankush Khardori
America needs to invest in mining and build resilient supply chains for the building blocks of electric batteries.
By James Morton Turner
The justices should remember that the First Amendment’s highest purpose is to protect the speech that’s necessary to democracy.
By Jameel Jaffer
By doubling down on fossil fuels, Exxon Mobil is choosing to profit through the most harmful way to the rest of us.
By Jeff D. Colgan
Political repression can’t save the Chinese economy.
By Ho-Fung Hung
As China stumbles, Ohio rebounds.
By David Brooks
What Sohrab Ahmari’s doubts say about his former cause — and about the economy and culture.
By Ross Douthat
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Local news organizations are in crisis, and courts need to protect their constitutional freedom to report the news.
By Gregory P. Magarian
It seems increasingly evident that the oil industry is unable or unwilling to help chart a path toward a cleaner energy future.
By Jason Bordoff
How the modern meritocracy made Trump inevitable.
By David Brooks
We need a nimble, adaptable new agency with the expertise, resources and authority to rein in the tech giants that control our digital lives.
By Lindsey Graham and Elizabeth Warren
Prices that go up don’t necessarily have to come down.
By Peter Coy
The court’s rulings are not the final chapter. The people often retain powerful ways to protect themselves through common-sense lawmaking.
By Aaron Tang
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