The New Trump Is Always the Old Trump
Thursday’s speech was a fitting climax to a confused convention that spun wildly between partisan culture war and appeals to national comity.
![Donald and Melania Trump at the 2024 Republican National Convention](https://cdn.statically.io/img/cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/zr0GGPfS-wdoXSZ6BP0SV_HNRwY=/547x0:1953x1406/80x80/media/img/mt/2024/07/DSCF3737/original.jpg)
Thursday’s speech was a fitting climax to a confused convention that spun wildly between partisan culture war and appeals to national comity.
To hold public office in the United States today is to know that someone could try to kill you.
A new book about The Apprentice reveals how the 45th president was shaped by tawdry reality-TV culture.
American allies see a second Trump term as all but inevitable. “The anxiety is massive.”
A decade-old interview shows he has long sounded unhinged.
The former president’s stories of business dominance were often exaggerated. With Republican politicians, he’s found a group he can control.
For many Americans, the former president has become an abstraction. They should see for themselves what his campaign is really about.
In a second Trump term, there would be no adults in the room.
In an exclusive excerpt from my biography of the senator, Romney: A Reckoning, he reveals what drove him to retire.
Donald Trump’s rivals struggled to show they were equipped to take him down. In fact, few even tried.