Kamala Harris’s White-Boy Summer
For her running mate, the vice president could be looking to make a diversity hire.
![Photo montage of J. B. Pritzker, Mark Kelly, Pete Buttigieg, Josh Shapiro, and Andy Beshear](https://cdn.statically.io/img/cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/I3az_GD-doH9gfIEfBdRxR6zKKY=/800x68:1598x866/80x80/media/img/mt/2024/07/VP_Picks2/original.png)
For her running mate, the vice president could be looking to make a diversity hire.
They’re acting as if they already lost the election.
Beneath ritual statements of comity and consensus, the underlying message was Get behind Trump.
The Republicans’ gathering in Milwaukee next week will be simply this: a four-day fealty fest.
Even those who parrot the party line acknowledge that their candidate stepping aside might be best.
Last night’s House Oversight Committee hearing marked a new low in American politics.
A jumbled cast of GOP characters have inserted themselves into the former president’s legal drama.
A historic double brood is upon us. They’ve waited years for this moment.
Most nonfiction isn’t fact-checked. The Kristi Noem saga could change that—but it probably won’t.
American partisanship turns diplomacy into a delicate dance even for the closest of allies.