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Kristen Soltis AndersonWashington Examiner |
There is rising anxiety among Americans that the presence of an armed federal force in cities is actively making life less safe for people who live...
These days, the label “independent” does not necessarily signify moderation or centrism.
Voters keep resolving to change our country and yet we are increasingly disappointed in those we elect.
Unlike during his last time in the White House, people now disapprove of Trump because of the economy, not in spite of it.
Though G.O.P. members are more likely to be viewed as “extreme,” they trounce their opponents on who is more effective.
Threats are no longer just the possibility of attack by a foreign adversary.
Where the center of American politics may be alive and well.
Trump’s handling of the Epstein issue runs counter to the sense that he is an outsider fighting against a hostile class of insiders.
The cultural winds have shifted on many issues, but Republican voters are not clamoring to unravel same-sex marriage rights.
Asking what voters think of a president’s performance is important, but so is gauging how they feel.
A central mystery of Trump’s presidency is whether his actions are in step with what voters want or whether he is going rogue on America.
The vice president is the millennial Republican we should have seen coming.
The group discusses the news and podcasts that shape their opinions about America and the world, what being a man’s man means and what they do and...
Advertisement Supported by Guest Essay By Kristen Soltis Anderson Ms. Anderson, a contributing Opinion writer, is a Republican pollster and a...