Amy Davidson
The Supreme Court, Under Trump
By Amy Davidson
Five federal court cases from the second Donald Trump Administration.
Five federal court cases from the second Donald Trump Administration.
It is impossible not to develop deeply unkind thoughts regarding the band’s continued pattern of exaggerated sentimentality.
Ryan is finding that, when it comes to complicated legislation, talking about opening up the process is a lot easier than actually doing it.
A new book responds to our modern anxieties about language by explaining calmly but firmly how our rules came to be.
A sting operation in West Africa raises the question: How closely entwined are the drug trade and global terrorism?
The very things that made the fast-casual chain so successful will make it hard for the company to bounce back quickly.
What are international leaders trying to convey to investors and businesses at this week’s negotiations?
Ryan Lizza joins Dorothy Wickenden to discuss a House divided, and how it might help Democrats.
In the latest episode, Bob meets the students of a course taught by the New Yorker cartoonist Emily Flake.
Given what is now known about the murder case, a stance against repatriation is a confusing position to stake out.
After Trump became President, in 2017, Congress passed the Keep Out Until This Insanity Is Explained Act, which excludes non-citizen Muslims from entering the U.S.
It seems pretty clear that President Erdoğan, whose policy has failed in Syria, is trying to be relevant again.
Reggie Miller agrees that Stephen Curry is already making a case for all-time N.B.A. greatness.
Before the book or movie, you read it here.
The podcast explores the case of Bowe Bergdahl, the American former prisoner of war.
Amid the storms of foodie fashion, this restaurant remains Manhattan French.
With her post-patriarchal TV show, Jill Soloway is determined to change how we think about gender.
The novelist is an enthusiastic member of the New York Athletic Club—as are several of his characters.
On Wednesday, their stocks jumped by more than ten per cent. From that perspective, the deal is already working.
His support is not just about a crowd in South Carolina. He is the front-runner for President in the Republican Party, and has been for months.
“Forcing Justice Scalia to weigh in on complex legal issues is, at the end of the day, cruel,” the researchers said.
With comedic authority and moral intelligence, he provided a good laugh-sob to help maintain sanity after a tragedy.
We crowdsourced the Caption Contest, and the results are in.
Far from mocking the subject or approaching it lightly, Spike Lee takes on gun violence with a scathing seriousness that spares nobody.
New York City’s shortest and oldest subway line, the S train, may also be the most musical line.