Will Donald Trump be back?
Michael Wolff’s Landslide is an absorbing account of Trump’s downfall – and a portent of his return.
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Donald John Trump, born in 1946, is president of the United States, after beating Kamala Harris in the 2024 election. His previous term in office was from 2017 to 2021. His first presidency was marked by drama and controversy. Find our latest news and comment here.
Michael Wolff’s Landslide is an absorbing account of Trump’s downfall – and a portent of his return.
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The US president has made clear that pardon power undermines equal justice under the law.
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The New Statesman‘s World Review podcast with Jeremy Cliffe and Emily Tamkin.
The conviction of Trump would require Republican Senators to decide that they’re no longer afraid of his supporters.
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The storming of the Capitol on 6 January was not a coup. But American democracy is still in danger.
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The Prime Minister and the US president are both unprincipled demagogues who have subverted democratic norms.
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Before Americans put this week’s anger to rest, those who stoked it should be held to account.
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The rioting in Washington is partly the fault of media businesses, in the UK as well as in the US, that…
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For years the president has been allowed to tweet anything he wants, with deadly consequences.
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If the US president is deposed, he could stoke a politics of grievance that would last much longer than his remaining term.
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The US president incited his supporters with lies and conspiracy theories and declared that Democrats threatened their way of life.
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One early morning, in the last turning week of the year, my spirits lift at the sight of the dawn ahead;…
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The right’s new fusion of prejudice and public spending only works for so long. People want a decent and tolerant society.
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The US president-elect faces a dilemma: support the break-up of America’s most valuable companies, or endure the wrath of his party.
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As senior Republicans stand by, the president is creating the conditions for a shiny new republic of riddles.
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American populism existed long before Donald Trump and is set to endure after he leaves the White House.
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An upcoming Senate run-off presents a warning to Trump’s party – and others tempted to embrace aspiring authoritarians.
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The US president’s supposed coup is more like a corporate bankruptcy.
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In many pockets of the West, from the United States to Poland and Hungary, authoritarian leaders are eroding democracy. In…
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After contracting Covid-19, Donald Trump, Boris Johnson and Jair Bolsonaro revived the ideology of state immortality.
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