The Political Scene | The New Yorker
News:Politics
This time last year, Republicans were reeling from a poorer-than-expected performance in the 2022 midterm elections; many questioned, again, whether it was time to move on from their two-time Presidential standard-bearer. But Donald Trump is so far ahead in the polls that it would be shocking if he did not clinch the Iowa caucuses. The New Yorker’s Benjamin Wallace-Wells and Robert Samuels have seen on the ground how much staying power the former President has despite some opposition from religious leaders and establishment power brokers. For MAGA voters, “The core of it is, ‘If Donald Trump is President, I can do anything I want to do,’ ” Samuels tells David Remnick. “ ‘I won’t have anyone . . . telling me I’m wrong all the time.’ ” Since 2016, Trump has honed and capitalized on a message of revenge for voters who feel a sense of aggrievement. Among evangelical voters, Wallace-Wells notes, Trump seems like a bulwark against what they fear is the waning of their influence. “To them, [Biden] is the head of something aggressive and dangerous,” he says. Susan B. Glasser, who writes a weekly column on Washington politics, takes the long view, raising concerns that we’re all a little too apathetic about the threats Trump’s reëlection would pose. “What if 2024 is actually the best year of the next coming years? What if things get much much worse?” she says. “Now is the time to think in a very concrete and specific way about how a Trump victory would have a specific effect not just on policy but on individual lives.”
A G.O.P. Strategist on the Republican Voters Who Could Abandon Trump
What Do We Know About How the World Might End?
The Trans Athletes Who Changed the Olympics—in 1936
A “Stunningly Decisive” End to Donald Trump’s Trial
Sam Altman Dreams of an A.I. Girlfriend
How the Reality-TV Industry Mistreats Its Stars
Why Vladimir Putin’s Family Is Learning Mandarin
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., on Why He’s Running
The Most Profoundly Not-Normal Facts About Trump’s 2024 Campaign
Stormy Daniels’s Biggest Role Yet
The TikTok Ban Is “a Vast Overreach, Rooted in Hypocrisy,” Wired’s Katie Drummond says
Will Young Americans Tip November’s Election?
The Pure Chaos Inside Donald Trump’s Criminal Trial
Randall Kennedy on Harvard Protests, Antisemitism, and the Meaning of Free Speech
Who Should Be More Worried about Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.– Biden or Trump?
Why Is Marjorie Taylor Greene Trying to Oust House Speaker Mike Johnson?
Georgia’s Secretary of State Prepares for Another Election
Trump’s “Bonkers” Immunity Claim, with Neal Katyal
A Student Journalist Explains the Protests at Yale
Jonathan Haidt on “The Anxious Generation”
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The New Yorker: Fiction
The New Yorker: The Writer’s Voice - New Fiction from The New Yorker
The New Yorker: Poetry
Polygon Cutscene