As efforts to repeal the ACA sputter, the GOP can refocus on protecting private enterprise from the voracity of a health-care industry that takes too much and delivers too little.
As right-wing parties across the West indulge fascist impulses, should the United States pursue a relatively restrictionist or libertarian policy?
Rolling back Obamacare will require full Republican support in the Senate. Rand Paul—and others—could defect using a familiar political play.
[提要] 现在万事俱备,这份攻略可供唐纳德·特朗普引领美国走上反自由主义之路
Glowing reviews of the president’s first address to Congress miss the crucial respects in which he fell short.
The self-proclaimed WikiLeaks lover is poorly positioned to complain about the release of information that disadvantages his administration.
If they don’t act decisively now, when will they?
A senior American official was compromised by his relationship with a foreign government. Who else has ties to the Russian state?
Trump’s national security adviser’s potentially false statements about his pre-inauguration contacts with Russian officials are a major scandal.
(Editor’s note: David Frum dropped in on the TAD discussion group of Atlantic readers for an “Ask Me…
Perspective from the right on Trump’s political challenge for the left
David Frum on Donald Trump's authoritarian tendencies
The preconditions are present in the U.S. today. Here’s the playbook Donald Trump could use to set the country down a path toward illiberalism.
The liberal scorn for nationhood and refusal to adapt immigration policy to changing circumstances enables the rise of extremism in the West.
Assessing the risks of service
Commentators love to praise the peaceful handover of power—but this year, it stands as a reminder of the system’s fragility and shortcomings.
If Vladimir Putin intervened in the U.S. election to help the NATO-skeptical candidate, the alliance is enhancing its forces anyway.
It was the president-elect’s hyperbolic characterizations of the pilfered material that turned routine documents into the stuff of scandal.
Assassinations can make good excuses for military conflict, but they don’t cause it.
Who is the patsy at the table?