• WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 01: Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Chief Medical Advisor to the President, gestures as he answers a question from a reporter after giving an update on the Omicron COVID-19 variant during the daily press briefing at the White House on December 01, 2021 in Washington, DC. The first case of the omicron variant in the United States has been confirmed today in California. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    What's behind the attacks on Dr. Fauci

    Opinion by Richard Galant, CNN
    On Christmas Eve, Dr. Anthony Fauci will turn 81. Having advised seven presidents in his role as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, he is one of America's best-known doctors, and, for many, a trusted voice on Covid-19.
  • People who arrived on international flights wait to be tested on the first day of a new rapid COVID-19 testing site for arriving international passengers at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) on December 3, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. The free voluntary tests are being offered to arriving passengers in the Tom Bradley International Terminal by the Los Angeles County Department of Health after the county confirmed its first case of the Omicron variant December 2.

    What the Omicron variant means for the holidays

    Opinion by Megan Ranney
    Just when we thought we were heading for a more normalized holiday season, a new variant -- the dreaded Omicron -- has been identified as a "variant of concern" by the World Health Organization. I and other public health experts are cautioning Americans to take this variant seriously, but also to be patient, as we have much to discover. But I recognize that the wait feels understandably frustrating: how is it possible that almost two years into the pandemic, we still can't know with certainty what the next best step might be?
  • U.S. House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) speaks during a weekly news conference at the U.S. Capitol July 01, 2021 in Washington, DC. McCarthy held a weekly news conference to answer questions from members of the press.

    Kevin McCarthy has a huge challenge

    By Charlie Dent
    It is never a good idea to campaign too openly for a future congressional leadership post which assumes an outcome in an upcoming election. Experience dictates members of Congress demonstrate prudence and humility before voters cast their ballots, sometimes in unpredictable ways. House Democrats learned this hard lesson in 2020 as they underperformed unexpectedly and nearly lost their majority, while Joe Biden won the presidency by a comfortable margin.
  • 01 December 2021, Bavaria, Munich: Passengers who arrived earlier on a Lufthansa plane from Cape Town, South Africa, stand in the arrivals area at Munich Airport. All passengers from South Africa have to take a PCR test at the airport. Photo: Sven Hoppe/dpa (Photo by Sven Hoppe/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    South Africa shouldn't be punished for alerting the world to Omicron

    Opinion by Alane Izu and Shabir A. Madhi
    On November 24, the Network for Genomic Surveillance in South Africa identified a new coronavirus variant of concern, dubbed Omicron. Since the variant's initial identification in South Africa, it has been discovered in a number of countries spanning multiple continents, and on Wednesday, the first case of Covid-19 caused by this variant was reported in California.
  • Deputy Secretary General of the European External Action Service (EEAS) Enrique Mora and Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani wait for the start of a meeting of the JCPOA Joint Commission in Vienna, Austria November 29, 2021.

    As nuclear talks resume in Vienna, the game has just begun

    Opinion by Aaron David Miller
    Having spent a couple decades in and around failing Arab-Israeli negotiations, I know a negotiation that's in serious trouble when I see one. The Iran nuclear negotiations that resumed this week in Vienna after a suspension of almost five months are a case in point.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 29:  U.S. President Donald Trump speaks as White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows (R) listens prior to Trump's Marine One departure from the South Lawn of the White House July 29, 2020 in Washington, DC. President Trump is traveling to visit the Double Eagle Energy oil rig in Midland, Texas, and will attend a fundraising luncheon for the Republican Party and his reelection campaign.  (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    Is Mark Meadows turning on Trump?

    Opinion by Michael D'Antonio
    Just when you think you know the depth of former President Donald Trump's recklessness and arrogance, something new comes along to prove you don't. According to The Guardian, former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows reveals in a new book that Trump tested positive for the Covid-19 virus three day before his first debate with then-presidential candidate Joe Biden. The book says another test in that period came back negative.
  • U.S. President Joe Biden speaks on the economy during an event at the South Court Auditorium at Eisenhower Executive Office Building on November 23, 2021 in Washington, DC. President Biden announced the release of 50 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve of the Department of Energy to combat high energy prices which are at a seven-year high across the nation prior to the holiday travel season.

    The Omicron Covid-19 variant is a crucial test for Biden

    Opinion by Dean Obeidallah
    Dean Obeidallah writes the new Omicron variant presents President Joe Biden the opportunity to show his leadership skills in the face of yet another crisis. Biden must be clear in his messages to the American public, and make sure to put science at the forefront of the response
  • Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) presides over the vote for the Build Back Better Act at the U.S. Capitol on November 19th, 2021 in Washington, DC.

    This tax would make wealthy corporations pay their fair share

    Opinion by Reuven Avi-Yonah for CNN Business Perspectives
    Corporate America has perfected the art of dodging the taxes that everyone else pays. From 2018 to 2020, 39 of the largest companies in America paid zero dollars in federal income taxes, despite reporting a combined $122 billion in profits, according to analysis from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. And 73 others paid less than half of the US nominal 21% corporate tax rate.
  • Former U.S. President Donald Trump looks on during a press conference announcing a class action lawsuit against big tech companies at the Trump National Golf Club Bedminster on July 7, 2021 in Bedminster, New Jersey.

    Just in time for the holidays, a new revenue stream for Trump

    Opinion by Michael D'Antonio
    In time for the holiday season, former President Donald Trump has found a new way to make a profit -- he's producing a picture book and promising to ship it mid-December. The price? It's $74.99 or, for those willing to splurge for that special person on their list, $229.99 for an autographed copy.
  • Harris and Buttigieg could be allies instead of rivals

    Opinion by Lincoln Mitchell
    The next presidential election is three years away. Recent reports about early concern over whether President Joe Biden will run for reelection in 2024 and about tension between potential 2024 rivals, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Vice President Kamala Harris are, to some extent, standard Washington gossip that can be safely ignored. Still, there may be something more than that.
  • TOPSHOT - A United States Border Patrol agent on horseback tries to stop a Haitian migrant from entering an encampment on the banks of the Rio Grande near the Acuna Del Rio International Bridge in Del Rio, Texas on September 19, 2021. - The United States said Saturday it would ramp up deportation flights for thousands of migrants who flooded into the Texas border city of Del Rio, as authorities scramble to alleviate a burgeoning crisis for President Joe Biden's administration. (Photo by PAUL RATJE / AFP) (Photo by PAUL RATJE/AFP via Getty Images)

    Border patrol's outrageous treatment of migrants

    Opinion by Patrice Lawrence
    The White House will be hard pressed to explain or defend horrifying images of Border Patrol officials appearing to chase and confront asylum seekers, largely from Haiti, whose only offense was to seek refuge in America after fleeing a country torn by political violence and natural disasters, writes Patrice Lawrence. It could be making a strong statement in favor of due process and dignity by allowing for an orderly asylum process, which is the migrants' right. Instead, it has opted for mass expulsions of vulnerable people.
  • TOPSHOT - Afghan residents and family members of the victims gather next to a damaged vehicle inside a house, day after a US drone airstrike in Kabul on August 30, 2021. (Photo by WAKIL KOHSAR / AFP) (Photo by WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP via Getty Images)

    The US military needs to do more than apologize for their deadly 'mistake' in Kabul

    Opinion by Daniel Rothenberg
    What is needed in this case, Daniel Rothenberg writes, is a robust effort to publicly address the profound impact of the attack by going beyond the idea of condolences through direct consultations with the victims' families regarding their needs, alongside a commitment by the US to provide them with reparations designed -- as best as is possible -- to repair the harm they have suffered.
  • HOLLYWOOD, FLORIDA - SEPTEMBER 11: Former US President Donald Trump speaks after the fight between Evander Holyfield and Vitor Belfort during Evander Holyfield vs. Vitor Belfort presented by Triller at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on September 11, 2021 in Hollywood, Florida. (Photo by Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

    The words Trump couldn't bring himself to say

    Opinion by Richard Galant, CNN
    On November 7, 1962, Richard Nixon met with reporters to concede that he had lost his bid for governor of California -- and to grumble about the way the press covered his campaign. It was two years since he had lost his race for president against John F. Kennedy, and few thought Nixon would ever run for office again.
  • Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, holds a press conference on July 21, 2021, at The Pentagon in Washington, DC. (Photo by Olivier DOULIERY / AFP) (Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images)

    Milley's reasonable actions raise a serious question

    Opinion by Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst
    In the last few months of Donald Trump's presidency, Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley made two phone calls to reassure his Chinese counterpart that the US was stable and not considering a military strike against China, according to a new book by reporters Bob Woodward and Robert Costa.
  • NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 13: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez attends The 2021 Met Gala Celebrating In America: A Lexicon Of Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art on September 13, 2021 in New York City. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/MG21/Getty Images For The Met Museum/Vogue)

    AOC and Kim Kardashian seize an opportunity

    Opinion by Holly Thomas
    No one should be surprised that a Met Gala with a theme centering on America itself resulted in one of the more contradictory, controversial red carpets the event has ever seen.
  • Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, holds a press conference on July 21, 2021, at The Pentagon in Washington, DC. (Photo by Olivier DOULIERY / AFP) (Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images)

    Retired General: General Milley did his job

    By Mark Hertling
    The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was right to reassure China during the turbulent final days of Trump's presidency that the US was not going to suddenly, recklessly start a war with them, writes Ret. Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling. Milley was reacting to the realities on the ground, and those crying 'outrage' and wanting him to resign need to understand how these actions work, how they are extremely beneficial to the security of the United States, and how taking them is truly tied to the responsibility associated with the Chairman's position.
  • Republican gubernatorial candidate Larry Elder speaks during a news conference with crime victims and law enforcement  on September 2, 2021, in Los Angeles.

    The Republicans' new go-to election strategy is 0 for 2

    Opinion by Jeff Yang
    Now that polls have shown that the attempt to recall California Gov. Gavin Newsom has failed -- perhaps by a historic margin -- I'd like to paraphrase a frequently memed quote from Return of the Jedi's Admiral Ackbar and say: It was a trap!
  • WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 19:  U.S. President Donald Trump stands in the colonnade as he is introduced to speak to March for Life participants and pro-life leaders in the Rose Garden at the White House on January 19, 2018 in Washington, DC. The annual march takes place around the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, Supreme Court decision that came on January 22, 1974. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

    How we can repair the damage of the Trump presidency

    By Michael D'Antonio
    In the torrent of books published about Donald Trump's presidency, few have offered recommendations for both repairing the damage done by his norm-busting term and addressing the vulnerabilities he revealed in our existing system of checks and balances, Michael D'Antonio writes. But in "After Trump: Reconstructing the Presidency," legal scholars Bob Bauer and Jack Goldsmith offer a blueprint that the government could follow to correct those weaknesses.
  • KIDS

    Why this Covid news could finally get us back to normal

    Opinion by Lawrence C. Kleinman
    Pfizer announced Monday that data from recent trials suggests that children 5-11 have a safe and effective response to its Covid-19 vaccine. The news holds the hope to herald a new phase in our battle to end the public health crisis caused by the coronavirus in the United States.
  • Former White supremacist: This is how to tackle hate and bigotry

    Opinion by Chris Buckley
    This week, we ask the question: What comes next for America and hate? The federal government lists White supremacy as a top threat to national security, thanks in part to a rise in White nationalism over the past four years. With a new president elected, how does Joe Biden confront the scourge of racism, anti-Semitism, misogyny and xenophobia that President Donald Trump helped stoke? SE Cupp talks to a panel of experts for our CNN Digital video discussion, but first, former White supremacist Chris Buckley writes our CNN Opinion op-ed.
  • TOPSHOT - A doctor checks on an unvaccinated Covid-19 patient at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center in Tarzana, California on September 2, 2021. - According to Dr. Yadegar at the hospital, the number of covid patients are significantly less than they were in winter, but from a psychological standpoint it's much more difficult because most of the patients in the ICU on respirators are unvaccinated, younger and healthier 30 and 40 year olds without comorbidities.  Vaccinated patients at the hospital are typically older, but the Covid-19 effects are much milder compared to the unvaccinated patients that have more severe symptoms. (Photo by Apu GOMES / AFP) (Photo by APU GOMES/AFP via Getty Images)

    Why doctors can't prioritize care based on vaccine status

    Opinion By Robert Klitzman
    Physicians commit to treating patients to the best of their ability, without prejudice, Robert Klitzman writes. Of course, it's different when a patient's decision can potentially jeopardize the health of others. But the point remains: as physicians, we are responsible for treating patients -- even those who make bad decisions.
  • The U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, Sept. 13, 2021.

    Democrats' tax plan puts their fragile majority at risk

    Opinion by Charlie Dent
    Back in July I pointed out that the Democrats' massive $3.5 trillion reconciliation spending plan put their fragile congressional majorities at risk. Since then, and to make matters worse, House Democratic leaders tied passage of this partisan reconciliation spending to the painstakingly negotiated bipartisan infrastructure bill passed by the Senate last month, which now awaits consideration by the House. In other words, the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, which is desperately needed and has broad bipartisan support, is being held hostage until the votes are secured to pass the partisan $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill.
  • MINNEAPOLIS , MINNESOTA - MAY 31: The makeshift memorial and mural outside Cup Foods where George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis  police officer on Sunday, May 31, 2020 in Minneapolis , Minnesota. (Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

    The key question for jury selectors in the George Floyd trial

    Opinion by Elie Honig
    Elie Honig writes that it's always difficult to select jurors in high-profile cases like the killing of George Floyd. However, the selection process does include vital safeguards intended to ensure an impartial jury. "Every or nearly every potential juror will have heard of Floyd's death before the trial begins. But that alone does not disqualify a potential juror."
  • WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 2: U.S. President Joe Biden speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House on March 2, 2021 in Washington, DC. President Biden spoke about the recently announced partnership between Johnson & Johnson and Merck to produce more J&J COVID-19 vaccine. (Photo by Doug Mills-Pool/Getty Images)

    Biden's historic victory for America -- no thanks to GOP

    Opinion by Julian Zelizer, CNN Political Analyst
    President Joe Biden is on the cusp of a major legislative victory. If all goes according to plan and the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan is signed into law, Biden will have scored an early triumph in his presidency. The Covid-19 relief bill will provide a wide range of benefits, from direct payments to American families, money for vaccine development and distribution, small business relief, more substantial subsidies for the Affordable Care Act, a child tax credit, a higher Earned Income Tax Credit, federal funds for state and local governments and much more.
  • ST PAUL, MINNESOTA - MAY 31: Demonstrators protest outside of the state capital building as unrest continues in the city and around the country following the May 25, death of George Floyd on May 31, 2020 in St. Paul, Minnesota. The state called up 7,500 national guard troops to supplement state and local police, the largest domestic deployment of national guard in the state's history.   (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

    The missing element in the George Floyd murder trial

    Opinion by Mark Osler
    As a former prosecutor and criminal law professor in Minneapolis, I am fielding a lot of calls about the upcoming trial of Derek Chauvin, who is accused of murdering George Floyd in this city. The media wants to know about the charges, the jury selection, the effects of televising the case and what the lawyers might do. No one has asked me about the very thing that makes this case important: The racially disproportionate treatment of Black Americans by the police. The trial will be a cyclone circling around the unmoving mass at its center -- race -- that silently drives the fury around it.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 04: US President Joe Biden gestures as he speaks during a virtual call to congratulate the NASA JPL Perseverance team on the successful Mars Landing in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on March 4, 2021 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Oliver Contreras-Pool/Getty Images)

    Joe Biden could be the most transformative president in 75 years

    By Jeffrey D. Sachs
    Americans believe by hefty majorities that we can solve our national problems and that the federal government should play a major role in areas including infrastructure, health care, environment, poverty reduction and economy. This broad support provides a foundation for Joe Biden to become the most transformative president since Franklin D. Roosevelt.
  • The most important exception the Senate can make

    Opinion by Norman Eisen, Richard W. Painter and Jeffrey Mandell
    There's a way to stop Republican senators from using the filibuster to block the passage of the landmark "For the People Act," write Norman Eisen, Richard W. Painter and Jeffrey Mandell. That way would be to make a special exception -- similar to that used for fiscal measures -- allowing a simple majority vote to approve laws on ethics and voting protections.
  • Texas Governor Greg Abbott delivers an announcement in Montelongo's Mexican Restaurant on Tuesday, March 2, 2021, in Lubbock, Texas. Abbott announced that he is rescinding executive orders that limit capacities for businesses and the state wide mask mandate.

    Texas governor's appalling decision on masks

    Opinion by Katie Mehnert
    I was getting my first dose of the Covid-19 vaccine at the Bayou City Event Center in Houston when the news broke that Governor Greg Abbott is lifting Texas' mask mandate -- even as health officials warn not to ease restrictions aimed at stemming the pandemic. No one at the vaccination site removed their mask, fortunately. But we immediately started discussing the decision -- and we were all appalled.
  • President Joe Biden speaks about efforts to combat COVID-19, in the State Dining Room of the White House, Tuesday, March 2, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

    Why Democrats may look back on the $1.9 trillion Covid relief bill with regret

    By Lanhee Chen
    The US Senate is expected to pass a $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief bill in the coming days before it heads to President Joe Biden's desk to be signed into law. This may seem like a major win for the new administration and congressional Democrats, but it's actually a Pyrrhic victory -- one that they may come to regret in the weeks and months ahead.
  • The U.S. and Texas flags fly in front of high voltage transmission towers on February 21, 2021 in Houston, Texas. Millions of Texans lost power when winter storm Uri hit the state and knocked out coal, natural gas and nuclear plants that were unprepared for the freezing temperatures brought on by the storm. Wind turbines that provide an estimated 24 percent of energy to the state became inoperable when they froze. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

    I love Texas but something's wrong

    Opinion by Paul Begala
    On March 2, 1836, Texas declared its independence from Mexico. Texas has the distinction of having been an independent nation before joining the United States. The history books say Texas joined the Union in 1845. Sometimes I wonder if Texas ever really, fully joined the Union -- especially on days like this, when while the US remains in the grips of a capricious, widespread lethal contagion, the governor ended Texas' mask mandate Tuesday and declared that all businesses in his state can be open -- 100% -- in a matter of days.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 16:  Physician to U.S. President Donald Trump Dr. Ronny Jackson listens during the daily White House press briefing at the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House January 16, 2018 in Washington, DC. Dr. Jackson discussed the details of President TrumpÕs physical check-up from last week.  (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    Ronny Jackson fit perfectly into Trumpworld

    Opinion by Michael D'Antonio
    As with so many chapters in the Trump saga, the tale of the former White House physician--described by subordinates as a 'tyrant' who had "tantrums," made "sexual and denigrating comments" and allegedly drank on the job, according to Pentagon watchdog's report--illustrates the strange way that the former president either attracts people who share his bullying and deceptive ways, or shapes them to fit the mold, writes Michael D'Antonio.
  • DUJAIL, IRAQ - OCTOBER 18:  U.S. Army soldiers salute during a memorial service for Sgt. Robert Tucker at a military base October 18, 2005 in Dujail, Iraq. Tucker, 20, from Cookeville, Tennessee, was killed by insurgents when a roadside bomb blew up his armored vehicle on October 13 near Dujail, just two weeks before the end of his 10-month deployment in Iraq. He was assigned to K-Troop, of the 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment, which patrols the area around Dujail. Saddam Hussein is scheduled to go on trial on October 19, for the death of 143 people from Dujail who he allegedly ordered killed in 1985 in revenge for an assassination attempt.  (Photo by John Moore/Getty Images)

    The veterans who need Congress to act in 2021

    Opinion by Stephen F. Lynch, Mark Green, Richard Blumenthal and Tammy Baldwin
    As members of Congress, we all share a deep respect for our men and women in uniform, as well as a collective responsibility to ensure that our veterans are appropriately cared for upon their return home.
  • fFORT WORTH, TX - FEBRUARY 16: Pike Electric service trucks line up after a snow storm on February 16, 2021 in Fort Worth, Texas. Winter storm Uri has brought historic cold weather and power outages to Texas as storms have swept across 26 states with a mix of freezing temperatures and precipitation. (Photo by Ron Jenkins/Getty Images)

    The phony blame game on Texas weather

    Opinion by Adam Sobel
    Even as millions across the West, Midwest and South--and particularly Texas-- suffer with access to power, water and heat, the political debate over causes and blame remains hot and laden with old arguments, writes Adam Sobel. A few are substantive but many others are provoked by a bad-faith committment to climate denialism and beloved fossil fuels.
  • TOPSHOT - Supporters of US President Donald Trump gather across from the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, in Washington, DC. - Demonstrators breeched security and entered the Capitol as Congress debated the a 2020 presidential election Electoral Vote Certification. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP) (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

    How the party of Lincoln became the party of Alex Jones

    Opinion by Nicole Hemmer
    At a news conference held in the hours after the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013, a man asked then-Gov. Deval Patrick whether the attacks had been carried out by the US government as part of a plot to clamp down on civil liberties. The governor, who had spent the day scrambling to respond to the crisis and begin coordinating the search for the perpetrators, dismissed the question with a quick "no."
  • NEW YORK, NY - JULY 23: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks during the daily media briefing at the Office of the Governor of the State of New York on July 23, 2020 in New York City. The Governor said the state liquor authority has suspended 27 bar and restaurant alcohol licenses for violations of social distancing rules as public officials try to keep the coronavirus outbreak under control. (Photo by Jeenah Moon/Getty Images)

    Andrew Cuomo's offensive 'apology'

    Opinion by SE Cupp
    Facing accusations of sexual harassment, the New York governor made a weaselly, withholding statement acknowledging some of his behavior and then excusing it as misinterpreted, writes SE Cupp. This will do little to quell the fury of so many women, who are all too familiar with the gambit of: hey, you just can't take a joke.
  • NEW YORK, NY - MARCH 03:  Vernon Jordan attends the 40th Anniversary Gala for "A Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Waste" Campaign at The New York Marriott Marquis on March 3, 2011 in New York City.  (Photo by Andy Kropa/Getty Images)

    Vernon Jordan -- Clinton's best friend and my personal mentor

    Opinion by David Gergen, CNN Senior Political Analyst
    David Gergen writes that Vernon Jordan, former President Bill Clinton's close friend, exemplified what a president's most important asset is -- a confidant whose discretion and independent judgment are guaranteed.
  • City workers repair a busted water main in McComb, Miss., on Thursday, Feb. 18, 2021.  Winter storms that dumped additional snow and ice on the Deep South plunged thousands of homes and businesses into darkness and left roads impassable across a wide area.  (Matt Williamson/The Enterprise-Journal via AP)

    What's happening in Texas and Mississippi has to stop

    Opinion by Peniel E. Joseph
    The historic winter storm that crippled Texas during the third week of February spotlighted the Lone Star State's pervasive history of structural racism. Similarly, it revealed how seemingly universal crises, such as climate change and catastrophes sometimes referred to as "acts of God" affect some communities much more severely than others.
  • An applicant holds an American flag and a packet while waiting to take the oath to become a U.S. citizen at a Naturalization Ceremony on April 10, 2019 in Salt Lake City, Utah.

    Biden is right about 'aliens'

    Opinion by Ed Morales
    With the Biden administration ending the use of the word "alien" when referring to undocumented immigrants in federal documents and communications, Ed Morales writes that the President is moving in the right direction.
  • 1788:  The inauguration of George Washington as the first President of the United States, also present are (from left) Alexander Hamilton, Robert R Livingston, Roger Sherman, Mr Otis, Vice President John Adams, Baron Von Steuben and General Henry Knox.  Original Artwork: Printed by Currier & Ives.  (Photo by MPI/Getty Images)

    George Washington's message for Donald Trump

    Opinion by Richard Galant, CNN
    On March 2, 1797, President George Washington wrote a letter comparing himself to a "wearied traveler who sees a resting place, and is bending his body to lean thereon." The idea of retiring after his controversy-filled second term was "most grateful to my soul," Washington confided to his former secretary of war, Henry Knox.
  • Betty from Ecuador, and her 4 year-old daughter arrive to a food distribution center in Queens on August 25, 2020 in New York City. - As the first day of school approaches, New York's poorest -- often uninsured families -- face a risky choice: send kids to school where they could contract coronavirus, or keep them home for online classes, potentially compromising their academic progress and preventing parents from working. (Photo by Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images)

    This an emergency for American families that Congress could actually fix

    Opinion by Debra L. Ness
    Rocio Flores was only a few days into her new job at a daycare center last March when Covid-19 caused businesses and schools to shut down. Soon enough, the center where she worked reopened. But, as she told NPR in September, her kids' school did not. So, like so many working parents during the pandemic, Flores had to decide whether to earn a paycheck to support her family or quit her job so she could be with her 7- and 12-year-old at home. She decided she had to earn money, but every day, she said she went to work scared that something could happen to her kids while she couldn't be there with them.
  • Biden shows he is the voice of presidential sanity

    Opinion by Jill Filipovic
    Jill Filipovic writes that President Joe Biden's polite and thoughtful tone at CNN's town hall Tuesday was relatively boring television — and reflective of much better governance. Four weeks into his presidency, Biden is governing exactly as advertised: with competence, humanity and moderation. "That's good for the country — and it would be good for us to pay attention."
  • Cuomo administration's handling of nursing home deaths calls for serious investigation

    Opinion by Jennifer Rodgers
    Jennifer Rodgers writes that New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is in the hot seat amid allegations that his administration undercounted Covid-related nursing home deaths. "Luckily, there are a variety of ways in which potential government corruption like this -- whether ultimately it is determined to be an intentional, criminal act, a bureaucratic misstep, or something in between -- can be fully investigated."
  • Donald Trump's candidacy and 2016 election win saw Rhodes and the Oath Keepers adjust their declared mission from anti-government to focus on specific issues.

    For Trump, accountability is still possible and necessary

    Opinion by Michael D'Antonio
    The second impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump may have ended with an acquittal on Saturday, but Trump's trials and tribulations are far from over. This fact should trouble the former president but comfort those who believe the powerful shouldn't evade accountability.
  • JOINT BASE ANDREWS, MARYLAND - JANUARY 20: President Donald Trump speaks to supporters at Joint Base Andrews before boarding Air Force One for his last time as President on January 20, 2021 in Joint Base Andrews, Maryland. Trump, the first president in more than 150 years to refuse to attend his successor's inauguration, is expected to spend the final minutes of his presidency at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. (Photo by Pete Marovich - Pool/Getty Images)

    The accountability era begins

    Opinion by Christine Todd Whitman, Norman Eisen and Joanna Lydgate
    Immediately following his impeachment acquittal, former President Donald Trump issued a statement saying his movement "has only just begun." He is right about one thing: Something has only just begun, but it's not another chapter of the conspiracies and lies to which Trump clings. The movement that just got kicked into high gear is an era of accountability.
  • California Gov. Gavin Newsom looks on during a news conference with California attorney General Xavier Becerra at the California State Capitol on August 16, 2019 in Sacramento, California.

    Gavin Newsom's French Laundry scandal is no reason to toss him out

    Opinion by Lincoln Mitchell
    The effort to recall California Gov. Gavin Newsom is gaining momentum and is almost certain to gather more than enough signatures to make it to the June ballot. Californians will then be faced with the question of whether or not to recall the man they elected with 61.9% of the vote in 2018 and who is up for reelection next year. The recall is strongly backed by the Republican Party, because while a Republican would have a very difficult time winning a normally scheduled election for governor of California, a recall might pose a rare opportunity.
  • Radio personality Rush Limbaugh interacts with the audience before the start of a panel discussion "'24' and America's Image in Fighting Terrorism: Fact, Fiction, or Does It Matter?", June 23, 2006 in Washington, DC. Radio personality Rush Limbaugh moderated a discussion sponsored by the Heritage Foundation titled and included members of the cast from the television show "24".  (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

    The man who created President Donald Trump

    Opinion by Nicole Hemmer
    When the news broke last October that Donald Trump had been diagnosed with Covid-19, legendary conservative talk radio host Rush Limbaugh immediately swooped in to help the campaign. He offered to hold a "radio rally" for the benched President, and Trump took him up on it. Though the resulting two-hour diatribe was not particularly effective radio, it highlighted just how important the radio host was to Trump's political career, even at that moment when both Limbaugh's show and Trump's presidency were nearing their end.
  • SAN PEDRO, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 01: An onlooker takes photos as a container ship enters the Port of Los Angeles on February 1, 2021 in San Pedro, California. As of January 28, a record 38 container ships were on standby to offload cargo to the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles amid a wave of online consumer goods purchases in the U.S. amid the pandemic. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)

    The US government must end its war on the American economy

    Opinion by Dan Pearson for CNN Business Perspectives
    As US Trade Representative-designate, Katherine Tai finds herself in an ironic situation: The most important country she will have to push to open its markets — a core component of USTR's mission — is the United States.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 09: US President Donald Trump (R) participates in the 'Roads, Rails, and Regulatory Relief roundtable meeting', at the Department of Transportation on June 9, 2017 in Washington, DC.  (Photo by Michael Reynolds-Pool/Getty Images)

    GOP chaos--and toxic Trump--are a big boon to Democrats

    Opinion by Arick Wierson and Bradley Honan
    The party's failure to toss Trumpism overboard will bring about more painful bloodletting for Republicans at the federal and state level in the years to come, as Republicans flee the party, write Arick Wierson and Bradley Honan. It's Trump who will help keep Democrats united.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 13:  Razor wire is shown atop a fence outside the U.S. Capitol during the fifth day of former President Donald Trump's impeachment trial February 13, 2021 in Washington, DC. The Senate is expected to conclude their deliberations and vote later today. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

    This was no triumph for Trump

    By David Axelrod, CNN Senior Political Commentator
    He avoided sanction, but his impeachment trial imposed a more enduring penalty on the defeated president by laying bare for the world and history his craven role in orchestrating the seditious, lethal mayhem at the Capitol, writes David Axelrod.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 06: Protesters gather on the door of the U.S. Capitol Building on January 06, 2021 in Washington, DC. Pro-Trump protesters entered the U.S. Capitol building after mass demonstrations in the nation's capital during a joint session Congress to ratify President-elect Joe Biden's 306-232 Electoral College win over President Donald Trump. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

    Leon Panetta: The risks of ignoring domestic terrorists are huge

    Opinion by Leon E. Panetta
    The former CIA Director writes that, like the foreign terrorist attack of 9/11, the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol was a wake-up call for America on the determination, resilience and will to harm of terrorists--this time homegrown. Capitol Police and other authorities were unprepared; this can't be allowed to happen again.
  • TOPSHOT - Supporters of US President Donald Trump protest outside the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, in Washington, DC. - Demonstrators breeched security and entered the Capitol as Congress debated the a 2020 presidential election Electoral Vote Certification. (Photo by ALEX EDELMAN / AFP) (Photo by ALEX EDELMAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    What if Trump hadn't had Twitter

    Opinion by Julian Zelizer, CNN Political Analyst
    Trump engaged in a month-long war against our democratic process, and his Twitter feed was an essential tool in doing so, writes Julian Zelizer. How do we know? Public discourse has already changed--and cooled--dramatically in the weeks since he was barred from various social media platforms.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 06: Pro-Trump supporters storm the U.S. Capitol following a rally with President Donald Trump on January 6, 2021 in Washington, DC. Trump supporters gathered in the nation's capital today to protest the ratification of President-elect Joe Biden's Electoral College victory over President Trump in the 2020 election. (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

    America saw and heard January 6 all over again this week

    Opinion by Ruth Ben-Ghiat
    For many Americans this week, myself included, the traumatizing videos the House managers presented during the impeachment trial elicited a visceral response. Rarely has the American public experienced such a compelling example of the power of images and sound to communicate in ways that written texts cannot. That wrenching emotional punch needed to land with us. It's a reminder that unless we hold leaders like former President Donald Trump accountable for their dangerous and manipulative uses of misinformation, they will be free -- or worse, emboldened -- to repeat such actions in the future.
  • Questions from senators are read during the impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump on February 12, 2021.

    Trump may end up lucky

    Opinion by Elliot Williams
    Lucky because if he gets acquitted again and avoids disqualification from future office in his second impeachment trial -- which is entirely possible, if not likely -- he will manage to avoid any sanction from the Senate despite having received lousy representation from his lawyers throughout the process.
  • Trump lawyers have a lot of explaining to do

    Opinion by Paul Callan
    Given the strength of the case against the former president, the Republicans in the Senate should be overwhelmingly voting for conviction, writes Paul Callan. If they don't, history will remember them as a collection of cowards who put the interests of a political party over that of the nation they were elected to represent.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - AUGUST 22:  The Oval Office of the White House is seen after renovations including new wallpaper August 22, 2017 in Washington, DC. The White House has undergone a major renovation with an upgrade of the HVAC system at the West Wing, the South Portico steps, the Navy mess kitchen, and the lower lobby.  (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    Presidents Day is a time to reflect on the incredible power we entrust to imperfect hands

    Opinion by Lindsay M. Chervinsky
    Every year on Presidents Day, the country celebrates our past leaders. In recent years, however, many Americans have begun to question whether we have crossed the line between remembering and worshipping. If the past four years have taught us anything, we've learned that presidents are far from perfect, but they are central to American life. Presidents Day is an opportunity to reflect on the oversized impact of commanders-in-chief on our culture, safety and welfare, and democratic institutions -- as well as a moment to think about what we might expect of future leaders.
  • US President Donald Trump looks on during a ceremony presenting the Presidential Medal of Freedom to wrestler Dan Gable in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC on December 7, 2020. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

    How we know Trump is guilty

    Opinion by Frida Ghitis
    One reason to put an impeached president on trial after he has left office is to deliver a clear, decisive verdict that the defendant's actions were abhorrent and should never happen again.
  • The FBI used this image of Biggs in its affidavit, saying he entered the Capitol within 20 seconds of a window being broken.

    America's military needs to confront the enemy within

    Opinion by Amy McGrath and Paul Rieckhoff
    This is our house to clean up, write Amy McGrath and Paul Rieckhoff. The military and post-9/11 veteran community need to tackle the issue of right-wing white supremacy in their ranks head-on after Jan. 6, to clearly identify the scope of the problem and understand how deeply it has invaded our military and veteran community.
  • What my dad and Kamala Harris's mom shared

    Opinion by Anita Raghavan
    Sixty years ago, two young people, living disparate lives in different parts of India, embarked on an odyssey that would change their future and over time help shape the complexion of a new country: America.
  • Police clash with rioters who breached security and entered the Capitol building in Washington DC, on January 6.

    January 6 was the crime of the century

    Opinion by SE Cupp
    The phrase "crime of the century" has been used to describe the most enduring, sensationalist scandals that rocked our nation -- the kidnapping of the Charles Lindbergh baby, the Son of Sam murders, the OJ Simpson case and the JonBenet Ramsey murder.
  • Rep. Jamie Raskin wipes his eyes while sharing a personal story on the Senate floor reflecting on the events of January 6.

    Two men cried in the Senate Tuesday. One of them made a devastating case against Trump

    Opinion by Jill Filipovic
    Jill Filipovic writes that the first day of the Senate impeachment trial of Donald Trump was a perfect microcosm of the country's partisan divide and what's at stake in a post-Trump America. "Only one side made a legally coherent and morally upright case on Tuesday. And the fact that they are unlikely to win suggests that the lessons of the Capitol riot haven't been learned by most of the GOP."
  • UNSPECIFIED - CIRCA 1754: Harriet Tubman (c1820-1913) American born in slavery, escaped 1849, and became leading Abolitionist. Active as a 'conductor' in the Underground Railroad. Photograph (Photo by Universal History Archive/Getty Images)

    Harriet Tubman on $20 bill symbolizes a new era

    Opinion by Peniel E. Joseph
    It's clear after his first week in office that President Joe Biden's leadership marks a new era, one in which the White House intends to be the disruptor of what's always been, to forge national consensus around confronting systemic racism, making that -- as he put it Tuesday -- one of "the core values of this nation." Biden's laser focus on racial justice represents the most sustained presidential focus on race matters that America has ever seen, at least since Reconstruction or Lyndon Johnson's Great Society.
  • WASHINGTON, D.C - JANUARY 06:  Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) sits in the House Chamber as the House comes back into session to continue the process of certifying the 2020 Electoral College results after Pro-Trump demonstrators stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021 in Washington, D.C. Congress has reconvened to ratify President-elect Joe Biden's 306-232 Electoral College win over President Donald Trump, hours after a pro-Trump mob broke into the U.S. Capitol and disrupted proceedings. (Photo by Erin Schaff - Pool/Getty Images)

    If Republicans don't denounce Marjorie Taylor Greene's extremism, they'll own it

    By Elliot Williams
    A CNN KFile review of the Congresswoman's posts indicated support for executing prominent Democrats in 2018 and 2019. That's stunning, says Elliot Williams, and the only response should be her resignation. But a vocal element of the party, with Greene as its drum major, has neutered the party's leadership, and rendered them incapable of condemning even obvious threats to others' safety.
  • U.S. President Joe Biden speaks after signing an executive order related to American manufacturing in the South Court Auditorium of the White House complex on January 25, 2021 in Washington, DC. President Biden signed an executive order aimed at boosting American manufacturing and strengthening the federal governments Buy American rules.

    Biden's most important stimulus measure

    Opinion by Jeffrey Sachs
    The US federal government should spend more money, and fast, to fight the Covid-19 pandemic, rescue hard-hit families and help states, cities and small businesses. But it should also strive for a relief package built on some degree of bipartisan consensus.
  • Former White supremacist: This is how to tackle hate and bigotry

    Opinion by Chris Buckley
    This week, we ask the question: What comes next for America and hate? The federal government lists White supremacy as a top threat to national security, thanks in part to a rise in White nationalism over the past four years. With a new president elected, how does Joe Biden confront the scourge of racism, anti-Semitism, misogyny and xenophobia that President Donald Trump helped stoke? SE Cupp talks to a panel of experts for our CNN Digital video discussion, but first, former White supremacist Chris Buckley writes our CNN Opinion op-ed.
  • In symbolic recognition of earlier generations' ambitions and accomplishments, and support for America's current Moon to Mars exploration approach, a Moon rock now sits in the Oval Office of the White House. At the request of the incoming Biden Administration, NASA loaned the Moon rock that was put on display in the Oval Office Jan. 20.o-new-administration/

    Where Joe Biden's moon rock came from

    Opinion by Robin George Andrews
    The day after the inauguration of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, the Washington Post reported on the aesthetics of the newly redecorated Oval Office. Among all sorts of noteworthy items, a moon rock was found to be sitting on a bookshelf. Social media rejoiced at the sight, an indubitably cool artifact to find inside the White House. But what many didn't know was that this rock, dubbed Lunar Sample 76015,143, had been on an Odyssean journey to get there, one 3.9 billion years in the making.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 22:  White House coronavirus response coordinator Deborah Birx speaks during a news briefing at the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House on May 22, 2020 in Washington, DC. President Trump announced news CDC guidelines that churches and places of worship are essential and must reopen now. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    Dr. Deborah Birx's shocking interview is way too late

    By Jill Filipovic
    In an interview, Trump's coronavirus response coordinator dropped some bombshells on his administration's gross negligence, writes Jill Filipovic. But while Birx isn't wholly or even mostly responsible Trump's mishandled Covid response, viewers were still left wondering: Why are we just learning about this now?
  • Biden should look beyond leverage to rejoin the Iran deal

    Opinion by Ellie Geranmayeh and Esfandyar Batmanghelidj
    President Joe Biden took office at a moment of global crisis, and tensions with Iran are among his most pressing foreign-policy challenges. After four years of nonstop hostility between Washington and Tehran, the first weeks of his presidency could determine the level of danger moving forward.
  • Democratic presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe Biden tours a local plumbers union training center in Erie, Pennsylvania on October 10, 2020. (Photo by Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images)

    What Biden and Congress can do to support unions

    Opinion by Richard Trumka for CNN Business Perspectives
    At the ballot box, working people pushed America in a new direction. Two years ago, even two months ago, the idea of a pro-worker control of the US House of Representatives, Senate and White House was far-fetched. Following the victories of President Joe Biden in November and Senators Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock three weeks ago in Georgia, that is now America's governing reality.
  • Clerk of the House Cheryl Johnson along with House Sergeant-at-Arms Tim Blodgett lead the Democratic House impeachment managers as they walk through Statuary Hall on Capitol Hill to deliver to the Senate the article of impeachment alleging incitement of insurrection against former President Donald Trump, in Washington, Monday, Jan. 25, 2021. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, Pool)

    Could Trump derail his impeachment trial?

    Opinion by Elie Honig
    Elie Honig argues that the Constitution allows for the impeachment of a former president, but the merits of the argument about whether a former president can be impeached and tried are only the starting point. "Things get really messy when we consider how a legal challenge might play out."
  • US President Donald Trump boards Air Force One before departing Harlingen, Texas on January 12, 2021. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    Why the Trump impeachment trial is crucial

    By Frida Ghitis
    How does a country recover from four years of virulent acrimony? The urgent need to heal America's divisions, to "end this uncivil war," stood at the center of President Joe Biden's stirring inaugural speech. He implored Americans to "open our souls instead of hardening our hearts."
  • Steve Gray stands outside his home in Gillette, Wyoming. After the election, he called CNN concerned that his city could become a "ghost town." He says he was laid off from an oil field job in 2015, then subsequently from another job in oil and then one in coal last year.

    This town powered America for decades. What do we owe them?

    Opinion by John D. Sutter
    This Wyoming coal town is a place of contradictions. At dawn, the land looks heavenly: Winds rattle the sagebrush; cotton-candy skies make a dusting of snow glow in pastel hues. Later in the afternoon, though, you look to the horizon and see the Earth hemorrhaging gray dust as trucks haul coal from pits the size of suburbs.
  • U.S. President Joe Biden signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, after his inauguration as the 46th President of the United States, U.S., January 20, 2021. REUTERS/Tom Brenner

    What Latinos want to hear from Biden

    Opinion by Ed Morales
    Ed Morales writes that while the inauguration of Joe Biden was a welcome relief after four years of Donald Trump's constant demonization of Latinos, it's going to take more than symbolic gestures of inclusion to address the needs of this often fragmented ethno-racial group which too often feels overlooked. "The question for Latinos, whose role in electing the new President has been endlessly debated, is how much they really figure into the Biden agenda."
  • Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett is sworn into her Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill on October 12, 2020 in Washington, DC.

    Republicans' claims about Amy Coney Barrett insult our intelligence

    Opinion by Jill Filipovic
    Barring the sudden emergence of a collective conscience, Senate Republicans will confirm Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court on Monday. They have told the public - and reiterated with a 12-0 vote of her nomination out of the Senate Judiciary Committee - that this is a perfectly legitimate path forward, and that Barrett is a highly qualified judge who will follow the law. What they have not mentioned is her extreme ideology.
  • President Donald Trump speaks during the second and final presidential debate Thursday, Oct. 22, 2020, at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

    How Trump could undermine Fauci and remake the US government

    Opinion by Laurie Garrett
    While many Americans were looking ahead to the final presidential debate earlier this week, President Donald Trump was signing an executive order the likes of which has never been seen in a democracy. It is an edict expected under a dictatorship, a banana republic or a military regime. And it appears to stifle the President's opponents within the government, posing a particular danger should it affect policymakers who are working tirelessly to fight the Covid-19 epidemic.
  • Noah's mom says he loves to go out and find frogs in the back yard. He makes a place with water and rocks for them to hang out in, observes them and then releases them near the river that runs behind the house so that they are safe from the lawn mower when his dad cuts the grass.

    The 8-year-old who fears adults can't be trusted to fix the climate crisis

    Opinion by John D. Sutter
    Noah is an 8-year-old in Flamborough, Ontario. He loves nature shows and his two cats, Shadow and Whispers (he probably meant to name the second cat "Whiskers," according to his mom, but he mixes those words up sometimes). When he grows up, he wants to be a veterinarian or a nature photographer -- something that puts him in touch with animals and the Earth.
  • PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC - OCTOBER 10: A health care worker conducts a COVID-19 test at a drive-in testing station on October 10, 2020 in Prague, Czech Republic. After relaxing almost all restrictive measures in the summer, the Czech government has responded to one of the worst spikes in European countries by declaring a state of emergency earlier this week. That has been accompanied by restrictions ranging from limiting public events to closing restaurants and pubs at 8pm. (Photo by Gabriel Kuchta/Getty Images)

    Covid-19 has exposed the US need to invest in public health

    Opinion by Susan Blumenthal and Rebekah Gee
    Covid-19 has crippled the US economy, compromised the health of our nation and exposed the shameful health disparities that negatively affect people of color and those living in poverty. In light of the devastation this pandemic has wreaked on our country, it is urgent for the US to invest in public health to better detect and prevent the spread of infectious and chronic diseases, redesign America's health care system for equity as well as effectiveness, and collaborate across multiple sectors of society to meet the basic needs of all Americans.
  • A woman pulls a baby on a pallet as they prepare to move to a new temporary camp for migrants and refugees, on the island of Lesbos, Greece, September 21, 2020. REUTERS/Yara Nardi     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

    Refugees like my ancestors are part of what made America great

    Opinion by Maya Rackoff
    I am the great-granddaughter of refugees who fled Russian pogroms in 1895. Had they not been given safe haven here in the United States, they would have been tortured and killed. My very existence depends on international humanitarianism, an awareness that has inspired me to work closely with others like them.
  • NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE - OCTOBER 22: U.S. President Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden participate in the final presidential debate at Belmont University on October 22, 2020 in Nashville, Tennessee. This is the last debate between the two candidates before the election on November 3. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

    Who won the debate

    CNN Opinion asked contributors for their takes on how Donald Trump and Joe Biden did in the final presidential debate. The views expressed in this commentary are their own.
  • The confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett is a threat to families like mine

    Opinion by Jeneva Stone
    My son Rob is 23 years old. He follows politics, enjoys sips of whiskey, and loves baseball. He also has a rare form of dystonia, a feeding tube, and a tracheostomy, among other pre-existing medical conditions. He uses a speech-generating computerized device to communicate with us. If the Affordable Care Act (ACA) were struck down by the Supreme Court after the addition of Judge Amy Coney Barrett, a mother of a disabled child herself, Rob would be uninsurable, like so many of his disabled peers.
  • PORTLAND, OR - OCTOBER 14: Pallets filled with Washington and Oregon mail-in ballots fill an unloading area at a U.S. Postal Service (USPS) processing and distribution center on October 14, 2020 in Portland, Oregon. USPS workers in Portland began processing and mailing about 1.5 million ballots this week ahead of the November election.  (Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images)

    The scary part of the SCOTUS ruling on Pennsylvania's mail-in ballots

    Opinion by Joshua A. Douglas
    The Supreme Court rejection of a Republican ploy to have the Court intervene in a case from the Pennsylvania Supreme Court is far from a major Democratic win -- and could spell bad news for the future of voting rights protections across the country, writes Joshua A. Douglas
  • FAIRFAX, VIRGINIA - SEPTEMBER 18: People stand on line,  spaced six apart due to COVID-19, in order to vote early at the Fairfax Government Center on September 18, 2020 in Fairfax, Virginia. Voters waited up to four hours to early vote in the upcoming 2020 presidential election, polls opened at 8am, and people where in line at 5:45am according to poll workers. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

    What if there's no winner on November 4?

    Opinion Richard L. Hasen
    What will the United States and the world wake up to on November 4, 2020, the day after Election Day? And could the US endure a close election in which Joe Biden is declared the winner but President Donald J. Trump refuses to concede?
  • In awful year for Asian Americans, I rejoiced in this

    Opinion by Michelle Yang
    Early in the lockdown, my 6-year-old was on his scooter zipping away in front of me on our quiet Seattle neighborhood street when I sensed a car coming from behind. I called out for my child to stop, but under his bright helmet painted with a cartoon lion, he couldn't hear me.
  • NEW YORK, NY - MAY 15: People wait on a long line to receive a food bank donation at the Barclays Center on May 15, 2020 in the Brooklyn borough in New York City. The event was organized by Food Bank for New York City and included dairy and meat items. The sports arena in downtown Brooklyn, now closed, saw lines wrap around the block as New Yorkers struggle with unemployment and other financial stresses brought on by the COVID-19 outbreak. Across America, cities and towns are dealing with some of the highest unemployment rates since the Great Depression. (Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)

    This pressing issue must come up at the last debate

    Opinion by William J. Barber II and Liz Theoharis
    On Thursday evening, Americans have one last chance to hear President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden on the same stage for 90 minutes. While neither candidate is likely to change course or depart from their stump speech, Americans deserve to hear both candidates address the pressing issue of poverty.
  • CLEVELAND, OHIO - SEPTEMBER 29:  U.S. President Donald Trump participates in the first presidential debate against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden at the Health Education Campus of Case Western Reserve University on September 29, 2020 in Cleveland, Ohio. This is the first of three planned debates between the two candidates in the lead up to the election on November 3. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

    Trump should be 'unmuted' at debate

    Opinion by Paul Begala
    The Commission on Presidential Debates is giving an enormous advantage to Donald Trump with its plan to mute the microphones of the candidates at Thursday night's presidential debate when they're not supposed to be speaking. That was likely not the commission's intent, and I realize President Trump and his spokespeople are fuming about it, but the mute button is a gift to the Trump campaign.
  • Judge Barrett is a threat to families like mine

    Opinion by Jeneva Stone
    My son Rob is 23 years old. He follows politics, enjoys sips of whiskey, and loves baseball. He also has a rare form of dystonia, a feeding tube, and a tracheostomy, among other pre-existing medical conditions. He uses a speech-generating computerized device to communicate with us. If the Affordable Care Act (ACA) were struck down by the Supreme Court after the addition of Judge Amy Coney Barrett, a mother of a disabled child herself, Rob would be uninsurable, like so many of his disabled peers.
  • My brother didn't get Covid-19, but he was a victim

    Opinion by Alyssa Klein
    As a sibling to someone who overdosed at the start of the Covid-19 crisis, I'm reminded every day that our national conversation ignores the uncounted victims of the pandemic. Victims like my brother, David, who passed away on March 24 in Orange County, California. While his death certificate states "acute polydrug intoxication due to the combined effects of heroin [and other drugs]" as his cause of death, my brother is another tragedy of this moment.
  • My brother didn't get Covid-19, but he was a victim of it anyway

    Opinion by Alyssa Klein
    As a sibling to someone who overdosed at the start of the Covid-19 crisis, I'm reminded every day that our national conversation ignores the uncounted victims of the pandemic. Victims like my brother, David, who passed away on March 24 in Orange County, California. While his death certificate states "acute polydrug intoxication due to the combined effects of heroin [and other drugs]" as his cause of death, my brother is another tragedy of this moment.
  • MIAMI, FLORIDA - SEPTEMBER 04: Construction workers are seen on a job site on September 04, 2020 in Miami, Florida. The Bureau of Labor Statistics released a report today that shows the unemployment rate fell to 8.4 percent last month, down from a COVID-19 pandemic peak of 14.7 percent in April. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    What working-class Americans want

    Opinion by Jim McDermott
    Forty years ago, I worked on an assembly line and as a gas station attendant. Those minimum wage jobs helped put me through college and law school. Throw in government grants, scholarships, low interest loans and hard work, and a kid from an ordinary background was launched on a path to economic prosperity. I'm a good example of the upward mobility that has always been a critical feature of American capitalism. In hindsight, I can see that being born a white male also helped me.
  • U.S. President Donald Trump looks on during a commercial break during a live one-hour NBC News town hall forum with a group of Florida voters in Miami, Florida, U.S., October 15, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

    Trump wasted a big opportunity

    Opinion by Joe Lockhart
    After roughly 20 minutes of trying to pin down President Donald Trump on why he models dangerous behavior during a pandemic, NBC's Savannah Guthrie spoke for most Americans in frustration by pointing out he was the President of the United States, not someone's "crazy uncle." But for anyone watching Thursday night, what they got was a full dose of America's crazy uncle.
  • California relief should never have been a question

    Opinion by Tess Taylor
    It was dawn on Friday, and all night scalding winds had been blowing. Our kids were sleeping on the floor downstairs to stay cool. We don't have AC, and until recently, in the Bay Area, we never needed it. Now, after four years of devastating early fall heat waves, high winds and worsening fires, I realize it's instinctive to keep the kids close on nights like this. We know full well what sweating through a hot windy October night means: Red flag warnings, constant vigilance, waking up to check air quality for signs of smoke. It means keeping an eye on the bag packed by the door.
  • Democratic Presidential candidate and former US Vice President Joe Biden participates in an ABC News town hall event at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia on October 15, 2020. (Photo by JIM WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)

    Biden hides his views on key issues

    Opinion by Alice Stewart
    There's some comfort after watching former Vice President Joe Biden's Town Hall on ABC: The 17 million Americans who have already voted didn't miss a thing. It was 90 minutes of nothing new, nothing eventful, nothing earth-shattering. The truth is, no news is just fine when you are the frontrunner. When you're leading key polls by double digits with less than three weeks until the election, you don't run your mouth, you let the clock run out.
  • 'The West Wing' reunion shows us a world very, very far away

    Opinion by Jeff Yang
    In the latest of what seems like a steady stream of television and film reunions in the time of Covid, the well-preserved cast of the beloved political drama "The West Wing" came together Thursday for a staged reading of one of the show creator Aaron Sorkin's favorite episodes: "Hartsfield's Landing," the 14th episode of the show's third season (of seven, for those who may have watched occasionally but failed to stick it out to the bitter end) which originally aired in 2002.
  • FAIRFAX, VIRGINIA - SEPTEMBER 18: People stand on line,  spaced six apart due to COVID-19, in order to vote early at the Fairfax Government Center on September 18, 2020 in Fairfax, Virginia. Voters waited up to four hours to early vote in the upcoming 2020 presidential election, polls opened at 8am, and people where in line at 5:45am according to poll workers. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

    Why your vote could be a life-or-death decision

    Opinion by Robin Cogan, Barbara Glickstein and Diana J. Mason
    After months of downplaying the dangers of the novel coronavirus, President Donald Trump has received no-expense-spared, cutting-edge treatment for his Covid-19 infection. Of course, it is reasonable that the President of the United States and commander in chief is treated aggressively -- the country's national security and leadership continuity are vital to our well-being and safety.
  • Supreme Court justice nominee Amy Coney Barrett, listens during her confirmation for Supreme Court on the third day before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill on October 14, 2020 in Washington, DC. - After liberal icon Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death last month left the nine-member court with a vacancy, Trump has rushed to fill it at the height of his presidential election battle against Democrat Joe Biden. (Photo by Stefani Reynolds / various sources / AFP) (Photo by STEFANI REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

    A modest proposal on SCOTUS

    Opinion by Judd Gregg and Charles Wheelan
    The Senate confirmation hearings for Amy Coney Barrett concluded Thursday. All indications are that President Donald Trump's nominee will be confirmed to the Supreme Court, bringing the number of conservative leaning justices to six -- an ironclad majority. However, that is not likely to be the end of the story.
  • 'The West Wing' reunion shows us a world very, very far away

    Opinion by Jeff Yang
    In the latest of what seems like a steady stream of television and film reunions in the time of Covid, the well-preserved cast of the beloved political drama "The West Wing" came together Thursday for a staged reading of one of the show creator Aaron Sorkin's favorite episodes: "Hartsfield's Landing," the 14th episode of the show's third season (of seven, for those who may have watched occasionally but failed to stick it out to the bitter end) which originally aired in 2002.
  • Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett testifies on the third day of her confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill on October 14, 2020 in Washington, DC. - After liberal icon Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death last month left the nine-member court with a vacancy, Trump has rushed to fill it at the height of his presidential election battle against Democrat Joe Biden. (Photo by Erin SCHAFF / POOL / AFP) (Photo by ERIN SCHAFF/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

    Why Barrett could be bad news for Trump

    Opinion by Laura Beers
    Amy Coney Barrett's appointment to replace Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court goes to the heart of the question of what feminism actually is. Is supporting the promotion of women inherently feminist? One of Ginsburg's best-known quotes came from an interview in 2015 when she asserted, "People ask me sometimes, when—when do you think it will it be enough? When will there be enough women on the (Supreme) Court? And my answer is when there are nine."
  • Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett speaks during her confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on October 13, 2020.

    Amy Coney Barrett's near-perfect performance

    Opinion by Paul Callan
    Judge Amy Coney Barrett delivered a relatively flawless showing in her controversial Senate confirmation hearing on Tuesday. A few hours into the questioning a senator asked her to display the notes she was using to provide her detailed answers. She picked up a white notepad with nothing on it but the inscription, "United States Senate" as the hearing room erupted in laughter.
  • WASHINGTON - JUNE 13: The sun rises over the U.S. Supreme Court June 13, 2005 in Washington DC. The court refused to hear the case of terror suspect Jose Padilla today as well as overturning the conviction of Thomas Miller-El, a black death row inmate, ruling that Texas prosecutors unfairly stacked his jury with whites. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

    Supreme Court's size is only part of the problem

    Opinion by Judith Resnik
    As the Senate Judiciary Committee begins hearings over Judge Amy Coney Barrett's appointment to the US Supreme Court, the size of the nine-member court has become an election issue. If, as expected, Barrett is confirmed, the toxic polarization gripping the nation could be further mirrored in federal courts, which are supposed to be places where open-minded judges aim to treat all people equally and render just decisions.
  • Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) speaks as Judge Amy Coney Barrett appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee on day two of the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on October 13, 2020.

    Really, Sen. Cruz? This is what you asked

    Opinion by Laura Coates
    Really, Sen. Ted Cruz? After speaking for over 20 minutes, the Texas Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee decided to ask Judge Amy Coney Barrett, a seminal legal mind, about her children's distance learning and piano lessons. Let's just say, it struck a chord with women everywhere.
  • CARACAS, VENEZUELA - MARCH 12: President of Venezuela Nicolas Maduro speaks during a press conference at Miraflores Government Palace on March 12, 2020 in Caracas, Venezuela. Maduro announced a travel ban for travelers flying in from Europe and Colombia and restricted gatherings and massive events in an attempt to stem the proliferation of the COVID-19 pandemic. Maduro also confirmed there are no cases in Venezuela. (Photo by Carolina Cabral/Getty Images)

    Biden is no friend to Maduro

    Opinion by Amanda Mattingly
    I've met Nicolás Maduro, and he's about the last person you'd want running a country. He's an incompetent authoritarian. He has driven his country and its economy into the ground.
  • Ashley Judd

    Ashley Judd: Women, we are in the fight of our lives

    By Ashley Judd
    The afterglow of an idyllic late summer walk with my love around Walden Pond was shattered when my best friend texted that she was bawling because of the news. I opened my news app, saw the name RUTH and the word DEAD, and was instantly, searingly, shattered.
  • Picture dated December 1961 of US First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy relaxing in a chair, a few weeks after her husband John F. Kennedy won the US presidential election. (Photo credit should read STAFF/AFP/Getty Images)

    Jackie Kennedy like we've never seen her before

    By Kate Andersen Brower and Kate Bennett, CNN
    She is arguably the most iconic first lady, but Jacqueline Kennedy is still very much a mystery. And that is exactly how she always wanted it to be.
  • I'm voting for Biden. I also think the Senate should confirm Barrett

    Opinion by Thomas Koenig
    The coming weeks may be brutal: The level of partisan rancor and performative outrage that we've seen over the timing of Judge Amy Coney Barrett's nomination may intensify during the confirmation hearings. And if that's the case, the hearings will be more than just terrible TV. They will underscore the fact that the American people -- and their senators -- are sorely lacking in basic civic knowledge. There may be protesters from the gallery shouting, for example, that Judge Barrett hates women's uteruses, and senators will likely be pandering to such unfounded criticism.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - OCTOBER 12:  Supreme Court Justice nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett stands as she is sworn in during the Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing for Supreme Court Justice in the Hart Senate Office Building on October 12, 2020 in Washington, DC. With less than a month until the presidential election, President Donald Trump tapped Amy Coney Barrett to be his third Supreme Court nominee in just four years. If confirmed, Barrett would replace the late Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. (Shawn Thew-Pool/Getty Images)

    There's no good case against confirming Barrett

    Opinion by Erika Bachiochi
    If recent history is any indicator, one can no longer be sure what to anticipate in a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing for a Supreme Court nominee. Admittedly, as a vocal fan of Judge Amy Coney Barrett, I feared the worst on the opening day of the confirmation hearings.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - OCTOBER 05: U.S. President Donald Trump stands on the Truman Balcony after returning to the White House from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on October 05, 2020 in Washington, DC. Trump spent three days hospitalized for coronavirus. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

    Donald Trump's troubling vital signs

    Opinion by Richard Galant, CNN
    Doctors have been searching for precise indicators of the health of their patients at least since the early 1600s, when a professor of medicine, Santorio Santori, helped perfect devices to measure body temperature and pulse rate. His goal, as Fabrizio Bigotti wrote, was "medical mathematics."
  • U.S. President Donald Trump speaks at  a campaign rally at the BOK Center, June 20, 2020 in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

    What Trump really wants from his risky rallies

    Opinion by Dean Obeidallah
    Nothing sums up more why Donald Trump is in such a rush to get back on the campaign trail than his Saturday event at the White House. The hundreds of supporters who gathered on the South Lawn dressed in MAGA gear not only exploded in cheers when the President spoke, they chanted in unison: "We love you!" In response, Trump beamed as he told them, "I love you, too."
  • American actor and director Robert Redford sitting beside American actress and director Karen Carlson in the film The candidate. USA, 1972. (Photo by Mondadori via Getty Images)

    Robert Redford: The big question I want answered

    Opinion by Robert Redford
    I'm not in the habit of quoting lines from movies I've appeared in, but every once in a while, something brings one of those old lines to mind. Recently, I've been thinking of a scene from a film I did in 1972 called "The Candidate."
  • President Donald Trump speaks from the Blue Room Balcony of the White House to a crowd of supporters, Saturday, Oct. 10, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    Desperate Trump is putting democracy at risk

    Opinion by Julian Zelizer
    The President ended one of the craziest weeks in recent history with a blistering speech on the White House balcony. In his first public event since he tested positive for Covid-19, Trump stood before an adoring crowd and threw them some red meat. He repeated falsehoods about Joe Biden wanting to defund the police and insisted, despite the coronavirus' recent spread through the White House, that "it's going to disappear."
  • An employee at the Utah County Election office handles mail in ballots in the midterm elections on November 6, 2018 in Provo, Utah. (Photo by George Frey/Getty Images)

    How to vote and make sure others do too

    Opinion by David Nickerson and Todd Rogers
    As behavioral scientists who study how to increase election turnout, we have become quite accustomed to receiving this desperate message from friends and colleagues: "I don't live in a battleground state. How can I increase turnout?" They badly want to participate in the election, but because their vote may have little influence in determining the outcomes in their home states, they want to help drive turnout where it will make the most difference.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 18: U.S. President Donald Trump walks toward Marine One prior to his departure for a campaign event in Battle Creek, Michigan, December 18, 2019 at the White House in Washington, DC. Today the U.S. House of Representatives is scheduled to vote on the two impeachment articles against President Trump. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

    Why Trump could win Michigan again

    Opinion by Nolan Finley
    There's no way Hillary Clinton should have lost Michigan in 2016. And there's no way Donald Trump should win it again in 2020.
  • Trump's train is running off the tracks

    Opinion by John Avlon
    The fever may be starting to break. Donald Trump has held his party in line with bullying tactics and the white-hot love of the conservative populist base.
  • Former US President George W. Bush speaks for his brother and Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush during a campaign rally in Charleston, South Carolina, February 15, 2016.

    The Republican who could help defeat Trump

    Opinion by Arick Wierson and Bradley Honan
    After the nation and the world witnessed President Donald Trump's selfish and dangerous game of political theater ever since he tested positive for Covid-19, there remains no doubt: Trump is not fit to hold the office now, and he certainly shouldn't be allowed to govern for another four years. America needs to put this unwitting experiment in kakistocracy to an abrupt end, and the best man to do that is former President George W. Bush by endorsing Joe Biden for president.
  • KEY BISCAYNE, FLORIDA - SEPTEMBER 03: Enbal Sabag, a Nurse Practitioner, prepares a flu vaccination for a patient at the CVS Pharmacy and MinuteClinic on September 03, 2020 in Key Biscayne, Florida. Flu shots are available at the nearly 10,000 CVS pharmacies and approximately 100 MinuteClinic locations across the country. Heath experts say getting the flu shot this year is important because the dangers of having COVID-19 and the flu simultaneously are still unknown.  (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    'Twindemic' testing chaos: The need for a national flu and Covid-19 plan is long overdue

    Opinion by Thomas McGinn and Ankita Sagar
    At the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, the nation witnessed firsthand the pressure and challenges that face our health care system when hospitals and health care providers deal with high patient volumes. At Northwell Health, we took care of far more patients outside the hospitals than inside the hospitals. Through all this we learned that Covid-19 patients required an unprecedented level of care.
  • Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett looks over to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., as they meet with on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2020. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, POOL)

    GOP's push to confirm Amy Coney Barrett is a reckless farce

    Opinion by Jeremy Paris
    The pandemic that President Donald Trump has so profoundly failed to manage now threatens his administration's top priority: installing Judge Amy Coney Barrett to fill the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's seat on the Supreme Court.
  • President Donald Trump during the first presidential debate, Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2020, at Case Western University and Cleveland Clinic, in Cleveland, Ohio. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

    With virtual debate, US wins and Trump loses

    Opinion by Jill Filipovic
    The President of the United States is scared, and it's starting to show. Donald Trump has tested positive for Covid-19, as have more than a dozen people close to him, including several sitting senators, members of his debate prep team, several members of his staff, his campaign manager and his own wife, first lady Melania Trump. The organizers of his next debate with Democratic nominee Joe Biden, which was scheduled for Thursday of next week, wisely announced a plan to move the debate to an online format. After all, who in their right mind would put a coronavirus patient in an enclosed room with other people, including vulnerable American voters and at least one other senior citizen, for at least 90 minutes of yelling and spewing?
  • US President Donald Trump speaks to officials during a roundtable discussion on community safety, at Mary D. Bradford High School in in Kenosha, Wisconsin on September 1, 2020.

    Trump's Covid failure could cost him Wisconsin

    Opinion by Kathleen Dunn
    Louisa May Alcott, author of "Little Women," wrote in her famous novel, "I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning how to sail my ship." If only President Donald Trump had learned how to sail the American government's ship. Perhaps he might have been able to calm the storm that is the Covid-19 pandemic. His failure, however, has brought us perilously close to capsizing.
  • US Vice President Mike Pence speaks during the vice presidential debate in Kingsbury Hall at the University of Utah on October 7, 2020, in Salt Lake City, Utah. (Photo by Eric BARADAT / AFP) (Photo by ERIC BARADAT/AFP via Getty Images)

    Mike Pence's upside-down world

    Opinion by Todd Graham
    Anything would have been better than the first debate between President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden. So, Wednesday night's vice presidential debate, in some respects, had a lower bar to clear.
  • Democratic presidential nominee and former US Vice President Joe Biden (L) and vice presidential running mate, US Senator Kamala Harris, arrive to conduct their first press conference together in Wilmington, Delaware, on August 12, 2020. (Photo by Olivier DOULIERY / AFP) (Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images)

    What Democrats must figure out to win the election

    Opinion by Richard Gabriel
    As a trial consultant, I have spent the better part of my 35-year career helping lawyers understand how trials can be easily lost even when they clearly have all the evidence and law on their side. It's an uncomfortable conversation and it comes down to a simple question: "Would you rather be right or would you rather win?" Often, you can't have both.
  • Biden and Trump are failing the American worker

    Opinion by Oren Cass
    As painful as the Covid-19 economic fallout has been, the unemployment rate today is lower -- and the average rate this year has been lower -- than the average during the four years of former President Barack Obama's first term, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That is no defense of the current catastrophe -- only an observation that the catastrophe is not a once-in-a-century occurrence but one to which Americans have become quite accustomed.
  • Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) speaks to the media following a break during the Senate impeachment trial at the U.S. Capitol on January 29, 2020 in Washington, DC. Wednesday begins the question-and-answer phase of the impeachment trial that will last up to 16 hours over the next two days.

    Lindsey Graham's big political miscalculation

    Opinion by Issac Bailey
    South Carolina may be on the verge of what seemed like an impossibility: becoming the first state in US history to be represented by two Black men in the Senate simultaneously. It's no longer a far-fetched idea because Democrat Jamie Harrison has become a formidable challenger for the seat occupied by long-serving Republican Lindsey Graham. Political analysts have moved the race into a toss-up category from solidly Republican as a bevy of polls show Graham and Harrison in a virtual tie.
  • Trump's erratic actions put US at risk

    Opinion by Michael D'Antonio
    President Donald Trump has abandoned work on providing economic aid to Americans devasted by the effects of the coronavirus pandemic. Businesses, families, and workers desperate for assistance will have to wait until after the election, "when, immediately after I win, we will pass a major Stimulus Bill that focuses on hardworking Americans and Small Business," he announced on Twitter Tuesday.
  • Dr. Chris Pernell and her dad

    My father died from Covid-19. Trump just spit on his grave

    Opinion by Chris Pernell
    Donald Trump is infected with coronavirus -- and because of it we are sicker. "Don't be afraid of Covid. Don't let it dominate your life," he tweeted on Monday before Marine One flew him from the Walter Reed hospital back to the White House. Some 211,000 souls and counting are lost, but their loved ones are asked to go away quietly and to bury their pain and truth because the show must go on.
  • US President Donald Trump steps off Air Force One upon arrival at Morristown Municipal Airport in Morristown, New Jersey en route to Bedminster, New Jersey on October 1, 2020, for a fundraiser. (Photo by Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images)

    Sean Penn and José Andrés: Trump has a duty

    Opinion by Sean Penn and José Andrés
    For more than seven months we've been fighting an invisible enemy on American soil. Every day, American citizens are suffering from the devastation of Covid-19. It has been a vicious and indiscriminate force ravaging communities, claiming more than 210,000 American lives and shattering the economy.
  • US President Donald Trump wears a facemask as he leaves Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland heading to Marine One on October 5, 2020, to return to the White House after being discharged. - Trump announced Monday he would be "back on the campaign trail soon", just before returning to the White House from a hospital where he was being treated for Covid-19.

    Trump, the patient who thinks he is always right

    Opinion by Kent Sepkowitz
    I have not been involved in the medical care of any president of the United States. That said, I have treated many patients who hate being in the hospital, who distrust medicine, doctors and the entire health care razzmatazz who only want to get home and who spend most of any conversation pleading to be discharged.
  • What the Church of Trump is costing America

    Opinion by Peniel E. Joseph
    How did the President of the United States become one of the nation's largest threats to public health and safety? When one man became head of "church" and state: the Church of Trump, that is.
  • Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks during a Biden for President Black economic summit at Camp North End in Charlotte, N.C., Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2020. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    Why Pennsylvanians should support Biden

    Opinion by Michael A. Nutter
    The first thing most people in Pennsylvania know about former Vice President Joe Biden is that he's from Scranton, the sixth largest city in the state, and home to nearly 77,000 people. He understands and shares our values of hard work, facing tough times with resolve and being decent and kind to neighbors and strangers alike.
  • How Trump could win the presidency and have Harris as his VP

    Opinion by Robert Alexander and David B. Cohen
    The United States has faced an extraordinary set of challenges in 2020. Foreign election interference, an impeachment trial, a global health pandemic, natural disasters, economic instability, mass protests and civil unrest have plagued the country.
  • Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito

    Same-sex marriage is at real risk at Supreme Court

    Opinion by Tim Holbrook
    The nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has generated discussion about the future of Roe v. Wade, the case in which the Supreme Court legalized abortion across the country. Such conversations are not surprising given the role that Justice Ginsburg played in advancing women's rights and Judge Barrett's writings as a judge and a law professor.
  • How Jill Biden would redefine first lady

    Opinion by Kate Andersen Brower, CNN
    In many ways, having Jill Biden as the next first lady of the United States wouldn't be revolutionary. The 69-year-old educator would be similar to most of the presidential spouses before her: She's a straight, White woman who's been around politics for decades, and holds some influence over her partner's decisions (see: Kamala Harris).
  • President Donald J. Trump works in the Presidential Suite at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md. Saturday, Oct. 3, 2020, after testing positive for COVID-19.

    Will the virus change Donald Trump?

    Opinion by Michael D'Antonio
    On day three of his hospitalization with coronavirus, The White House released images from Walter Reed Medical Center showing a President Donald Trump rarely seen. Rendered wan by the disease that has devastated the country he is supposed to lead, he sat in shirtsleeves looking weary and worried. With no bulky suit to broaden his shoulders, Trump seemed more like a vulnerable old man than the fearsome figure revealed in Bob Woodward's bestselling "Rage."
  • President Donald Trump arrives at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, in Bethesda, Md., Friday, Oct. 2, 2020, on Marine One helicopter after he tested positive for COVID-19. White House chief of staff Mark Meadows is at second from left. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

    How Trump wound up in the hospital

    Opinion by Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst
    President Donald Trump has had a lot to say about the coronavirus, a great deal of it misleading or simply false, and he has also modeled and even encouraged irresponsible behavior, all of which has surely contributed to the spread of the virus, since the President has the most powerful megaphone in the United States.
  • Lieutenant General Nathan Bedford Forrest bust at Old Live Oak Cemetery. (Photo by: Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

    What a Confederate general taught me about US

    Opinion by Jane Greenway Carr
    As a schoolchild growing up in Tennessee, I visited the battlefields of Fort Pillow and Shiloh and toured Andrew Jackson's home, the Hermitage. When I was a teenager, I haunted the blues clubs of Beale Street (the ones that would let me in without ID). I have watched football at the Liberty Bowl and basketball and bands at the Pyramid (before it became a Bass Pro Shop), I have driven through the Smoky Mountains and walked the floor of the Tennessee State House. (I have not been to Dollywood. I know, I hate myself too.)
  • An F-35 fighter plane flies over the White House on June 12, 2019, in Washington DC. - US President Donald Trump announced while meeting with Polish President Andrzej Duda that Poland was ordering more than 30 F-35 combat aircraft. (Photo by Eric BARADAT / AFP)        (Photo credit should read ERIC BARADAT/AFP/Getty Images)

    Don't let Abraham Accords become arms deals

    Opinion by William D. Hartung
    The normalization agreement between Israel and the UAE, dubbed formally as the "Abraham Accords," could potentially spark a new Middle East arms race. Given the multiple conflicts already raging in the region, all fueled by imported arms, that cannot be allowed to happen.
  • US President Donald Trump speaks during the first presidential debate at Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, on September 29, 2020.

    Trump's call for poll-watchers summons dark history

    Opinion by Nicole Hemmer
    Chris Wallace ended the first presidential debate Tuesday with a softball question, asking the candidates if they would urge their supporters not to engage in "civil unrest" around the election. Joe Biden gave a swift and clear yes. President Donald Trump did not.
  • Trump is trying to split Biden from the left

    Opinion by Jeff Weaver
    The first presidential debate this week was indisputably one of the ugliest in modern US history. President Donald Trump interrupted Joe Biden at nearly every turn, and CNN's Chris Cuomo later described the event as a "shit show."
  • US President Donald Trump steps off Air Force One upon arrival at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland on October 1, 2020. - The president returned to Washington, DC after attending a fundraiser in Bedminster, New Jersey. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    Even the President of the United States isn't safe

    By Julian Zelizer, CNN Political Analyst
    In a presidential election with more shocking moments than any other, the news of October 2 has rattled the nation and the world. President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump have been diagnosed with Covid-19. With only a few weeks left until Election Day, the President of the United States must now recover from a virus that has ravaged the world in 2020 and upended our lives.
  • US President Donald Trump looks on during the first presidential debate at Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, on September 29, 2020.

    Trump encourages voter intimidation tactics

    Opinion by Frida Ghitis
    One day, when I was reporting from Cuba in the late 1990s, I received a message from a dissident group about a protest for democracy and human rights they were planning to hold at a public park. Despite the obvious risks, they had decided to go forward with the protest, given that Havana was about to hold a major international gathering and the Castro regime had promised to ease up on repression.
  • Democratic Presidential candidate and former US Vice President Joe Biden speaks during the first presidential debate at Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, on September 29, 2020. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

    Biden's secret body language weapon

    Opinion by Bill McGowan and Juliana Silva
    The fact that Tuesday night's debate in Cleveland was more of a crash than a clash will no doubt dominate the media coverage and people's memory of the event. No matter how much we would like to wipe the image of that disgraceful spectacle from our consciousness, the indelible stain of a President of the United States behaving like a juvenile delinquent initiating a food fight will be tough to erase. But what may get overlooked amid the pandemonium that erupted at the first of three showdowns between former Vice President Joe Biden and President Donald Trump was the stark contrast in the two candidates' body language.
  •  U.S. President Donald Trump participates in the first presidential debate against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden on September 29, 2020 in Cleveland, Ohio. This is the first of three planned debates between the two candidates in the lead up to the election on November 3.

    Why this man is too emotional to be president

    Opinion by Jill Filipovic
    Tuesday's presidential debate may have been the most emotional in history -- thanks to the interruptions, angry fits and outbursts from President Donald Trump. There was little policy discussion, rational debate or rationality at all (although Democratic candidate Joe Biden tried). Instead, viewers were treated to the rantings of a hysterical, mercurial man who wants to be reelected president.
  • US President Donald Trump looks on during the first presidential debate at Case Western Reserve University and Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, on September 29, 2020.

    Trump encourages voter intimidation tactics in bid to hold on to power

    Opinion by Frida Ghitis
    One day, when I was reporting from Cuba in the late 1990s, I received a message from a dissident group about a protest for democracy and human rights they were planning to hold at a public park. Despite the obvious risks, they had decided to go forward with the protest, given that Havana was about to hold a major international gathering and the Castro regime had promised to ease up on repression.
  • gun violence black community police brutality eg orig_00014023.jpg

    The BREATHE Act is the policy change US needs

    Opinion by Derrick Johnson and Gina Clayton-Johnson
    The grand jury's decision to not charge the officers who killed Breonna Taylor was heartbreaking in its familiarity. From Eric Garner to Michael Brown to Sandra Bland and now Breonna Taylor, the murder of Black people by law enforcement in this country often seems not to be considered a crime. The grand jury in Kentucky played into this painful feedback loop, charging one officer out of three for wanton endangerment, but not for taking Breonna's life.
  • German Bishops take part in the opening mass at the German Bishops' Conference on September 25, 2018 in the cathedral in Fulda, western Germany. - Germany's Catholic Church is due on September 25, 2018 to confess and apologise for thousands of cases of sexual abuse against children, part of a global scandal heaping pressure on the Vatican. It will release the latest in a series of reports on sexual crimes and cover-ups spanning decades that has shaken the largest Christian Church, from Europe to the United States, South America and Australia. (Photo by Arne Dedert / dpa / AFP) / Germany OUT        (Photo credit should read ARNE DEDERT/DPA/AFP via Getty Images)

    On abortion, ACB doesn't speak for US Christians

    Opinion by Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons
    It wasn't a surprise that President Donald Trump announced Amy Coney Barrett as his nominee to serve on the US Supreme Court Saturday. Barrett's conservative Catholic faith was a flashpoint during her confirmation hearings in 2017 to serve as a federal appeals court judge and is coming up again now.
  • US President Donald Trump waits to take questions during a briefing at the White House September 27, 2020, in Washington, DC. - US President Donald Trump paid just $750 in federal income taxes in 2016, the year he won the election, The New York Times reported September 27, 2020, citing tax return data extending more than 20 years.

    Turns out Trump is not a 'winner' after all

    Opinion by Michael D'Antonio
    "The beauty of me is that I'm very rich." Donald Trump said that in 2011, when he was talking about a White House run. In 2015 he took his ride down a golden escalator and made his super-patriot's promise to use his unmatched business skills to make America great again, as great as he was. Enough people believed it to win him the Electoral College (losing the popular vote) and the Oval Office.
  • DES MOINES, IA - JANUARY 26: Democratic presidential candidate Mayor Pete Buttigieg is interviewed by moderator Chris Wallace during a FOX News Channel Town Hall at the River Center in Des Moines, Iowa on January 26, 2020 in Des Moines, Iowa. Buttigieg and other candidates are making their final pleas to the voters of Iowa with the caucus just days away. The Iowa caucuses will be held in eight days on February 3. (Photo by Steve Pope/Getty Images)

    Chris Wallace's debate topic is so very wrong

    Opinion by Steven A. Holmes, CNN
    Chris Wallace has the well-deserved reputation of a hard-hitting and fair journalist. He is one of the few at Fox News willing to bring as much heat to President Donald Trump as he is to any Democrat or progressive activist.
  • 382268 01: (NEWSWEEK AND US NEWS OUT UNTIL DECEMBER 4, 2000) Chairman of the Dade County canvassing board Judge Lawrence King, left, holds up a ballot for canvassing board member Myriam Lehr during the recount of ballots at the Miami Dade Government center November 21, 2000 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Robert King/Newsmakers)

    How weaponizing outrage paid off for GOP

    Opinion by Julian Zelizer, CNN Political Analyst
    President Donald Trump seems intent on sowing doubt over the election results, creating a pathway to contest the results and remain in power even if he loses.
  • Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump addresses delegates at the end of the last day of the Republican National Convention on July 21, 2016, in Cleveland, Ohio. / AFP / Timothy A. CLARY        (Photo credit should read TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)

    Trump's strategy is psychological warfare

    Opinion by Ruth Ben-Ghiat
    During the third presidential debate in 2016, candidate Donald Trump made headlines for refusing to answer Fox News journalist Chris Wallace, who was moderating, on whether he would accept the result of the upcoming election. "I will look at it at the time. I will keep you in suspense," he said, claiming the race was already fixed against him. "That's not how democracy works," replied his opponent, Hillary Clinton, who went on to win the popular vote but lose the election.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - AUGUST 10:  Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court William Rehnquist (R) administers the oath of office to newly-appointed U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (L) as U.S. President Bill Clinton looks on 10 August 1993. Ginsburg is the 107th Supreme Court justice and the second woman to serve on the high court.  (Photo credit should read KORT DUCE/AFP/Getty Images)

    RBG faced opposition from the start

    Opinion by Renee Knake Jefferson and Hannah Brenner Johnson
    When President Bill Clinton selected Ruth Bader Ginsburg as the nominee from his Supreme Court shortlist in 1993, women's groups—both conservative and liberal—raised concerns. As we discuss in our book "Shortlisted," some feminists criticized Ginsburg's position on equality as one that ignored the historic oppression of women. She advocated that men and women should be treated equally under the law, rather than receive special treatment based on their sex. Additionally, abortion opponents and champions alike expressed trepidation about her appointment.
  • Trump-Biden debate moderators face a huge challenge

    Opinion by Todd Graham
    Complaining about debate moderators has now become part of the game, the same way we argue about officiating in sports. According to a report by the Annenberg Debate Reform Working Group, which was created to figure out how to increase the value of presidential general election debates, there are four main areas of criticism aimed at presidential debate moderators. I'll address these and provide some workable tips that can be used by this year's group.
  • Demonstrators wearing protective face masks hold up placards with names of women during a demonstration for a better implementation of the Istanbul Convention and the Turkish Law 6284 for the protection of the family and prevention of violence against women, in Istanbul, Turkey, on August 5, 2020. - Thousands of women in Turkey took to the streets on August 5 to demand that the government does not withdraw from a landmark treaty on preventing domestic violence. (Photo by Yasin AKGUL / AFP) (Photo by YASIN AKGUL/AFP via Getty Images)

    Treaties alone can't protect women from violence

    By Rahila Gupta
    Women have always been punching bags for men's anger in the patriarchal systems we live in. It comes as no surprise that rates of violence are up everywhere as the pandemic and its lockdowns push women further into men's deadly embrace.
  • Listen to what Olivia Troye says about Trump

    Opinion by Miles Taylor
    Last week the White House was hit by a bombshell: A former top aide to Vice President Mike Pence, who was intimately involved in the administration's response to the coronavirus, blamed President Trump for mishandling the crisis and causing unnecessary deaths.
  • Biden could make up for his criminal justice record

    Opinion by Ashish Prashar and DeAnna Hoskins
    Soon, hopefully, former Vice President Joe Biden may be able to atone for missteps made by him, as well as State and Local officials, in designing a criminal justice system that perpetually disenfranchises people of color and the poor. Earlier this year, when the former vice president spoke on justice issues, he recognized his shortcomings: "I know we haven't always gotten things right, but I've always tried."
  • Trump's amateurish mistake

    Opinion by Juliana Silva and Bill McGowan, CNN
    If the Las Vegas oddsmakers were handicapping the upcoming Presidential debates, they might be inclined to favor President Donald Trump to win -- and Trump has only himself to blame for that.
  • New Yorkers gather for a vigil remembering and honoring the life of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in Washington Square Park in New York City on September 19, 2020. Brooklyn-born Ruth Bader Ginsburg, aka Notorious RBG, died on Friday 19, 2020, after a battle with pancreatic cancer.

    How to remember the 'Notorious RBG'

    Opinion by Peniel Joseph
    Ruth Bader Ginsburg's legacy, in so many ways, is fundamentally important to understanding our current national and global age of Black Lives Matter. Indeed, her presence in popular culture rests in large part on the global popularity of hip hop, which represents a defining cultural innovation of post-civil rights America.
  • US President Donald Trump speaks to the media prior to departing from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, September 21, 2020, as he travels to Ohio.

    What we owe the 200,000 victims

    Opinion by Dean Obeidallah
    On Monday, with the US on the verge of reaching the solemn number of 200,000 dead from Covid-19, Donald Trump appeared on Fox News where the topic of the virus was raised. Did Trump express sympathy for the heartbreaking losses caused to families across the nation from this deadly pandemic? Nope, instead he patted himself on the back for doing what he called "a phenomenal job" in handling Covid-19, giving himself an "A+." The only criticism Trump would offer was regarding the public relations for the virus, saying in that area, "I give myself a D." He blamed the low grade on "fake news."
  • Justices of the US Supreme Court pose for their official photo at the Supreme Court in Washington, DC on November 30, 2018. - Standing from left: Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch, Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Associate Justice Elena Kagan and Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh.Seated from left to right, bottom row: Associate Justice Stephen Breyer, Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John  Roberts, Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Associate Justice Samuel Alito. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP)        (Photo credit should read MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)

    Democrats also play politics with Supreme Court seats

    Opinion by Charlie Dent
    The American people owe Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg a measureless debt of gratitude for her distinguished service on the Supreme Court. Her inspirational life story and work helped advance justice and opportunities for women in our country.
  • Biden's centrism doesn't hold up

    Opinion by Lanhee Chen
    Joe Biden's campaign policy agenda will add $5.4 trillion in new federal spending over the next decade, according to a new analysis by the Penn Wharton Budget Model, a nonpartisan research-based initiative at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. Biden has many aggressive plans, which include remaking the US health care system, expanding housing subsidies, and making public colleges and universities tuition-free for families making less than $125,000 a year. In fact, one economist concluded that Biden's policy platform added up to "the largest proposed spending increase by a presidential nominee since George McGovern," the Democrat who in 1972 proposed a universal basic income for all Americans.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 12:  U.S. Senate Majority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) speaks to members of the press after the weekly Senate Republican Policy Luncheon at Hart Senate Office Building May 12, 2020 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. Senate Republicans held the weekly luncheon to discuss their agenda.  (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    McConnell is going to turn me into a socialist

    Opinion by Issac Bailey
    Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is about to turn me into a socialist or whatever is necessary to save this nation's fast-fading democracy. If he and Senate Republicans move forward with quickly replacing the recently-deceased Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, I would have lost all faith in what I believed this democratic experiment to be. In a healthy democracy, Republican senators would vow not to move forward with a vote on Ginsburg's replacement until early next year or only accept a consensus pick who can garner bipartisan support. Maybe a nominee like Merrick Garland, the man whom now retired-Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch told then-President Barack Obama would easily win Senate confirmation -- until Obama actually nominated Garland. But this is not a healthy democracy.
  • WASHINGTON - MARCH 03:  U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg smiles during a photo session with photographers at the U.S. Supreme Court March 3, 2006 in Washington DC.  (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

    How RBG would have powered through this crisis

    Opinion by Neil Siegel
    I was very fortunate to serve as one of Ruth Bader Ginsburg's law clerks during the US Supreme Court's October 2003 term. I was also blessed by her presence in my life -- and in the lives of my daughters -- in the years following my clerkship. She always found time when we asked. She always asked how we were doing, particularly during difficult times.
  • Trump-Biden just got fiercer

    Opinion by Richard Galant, CNN
    The death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Friday brought an outpouring of tributes for a freedom fighter whose determination and skill led to landmark changes in the law. It also immediately prompted a partisan battle over her replacement that is likely to supercharge the November election, already considered the most consequential in decades.
  • A general view of the U.S. Supreme Court on June 30, 2020 in Washington, DC. The court is expected to release a ruling determining whether President Trump can block the release of his financial records.

    Obamacare could be doomed if Trump fills seat

    Opinion by Abdul El-Sayed
    The prospect of a third Supreme Court pick for President Donald Trump looms large following the passing of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Friday. In 2016, when President Obama nominated Judge Merrick Garland for the high court, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell refused to even bring Garland up -- arguing that, in an election year, it was only proper that he should wait for the will of the people. It was "about a principle, not a person," McConnell said back then.
  • ABC town hall Ellesia Blaque

    Why I confronted Trump at the town hall

    Opinion by Ellesia A. Blaque
    There are millions of people across the globe just like me. People beaten down by diseases we didn't ask for; diseases we were born with, or acquired. We are people who must face them on a daily basis, and for the rest of our lives, and for which we are minimized and ignored.
  • Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden speaks at the CNN Presidential Town Hall in Scranton, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, September 17, 2020. (Gabriella Demczuk for CNN)

    Biden's mistakes could cost him badly

    Opinion by Alice Stewart
    Joe Biden's campaign is no doubt feeling pretty good after the former vice president's Thursday night performance in the CNN drive-in town hall in Scranton, Pennsylvania. With 47 days until election day, Biden took full advantage of the national spotlight to address the issues, call for unity and attack his opponent, President Donald Trump.
  • Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden speaks at the CNN Presidential Town Hall in Scranton, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, September 17, 2020. (Gabriella Demczuk for CNN)

    Biden's mistakes could cost him badly in debate with Trump

    Opinion by Alice Stewart
    Joe Biden's campaign is no doubt feeling pretty good after the former vice president's Thursday night performance in the CNN drive-in town hall in Scranton, Pennsylvania. With 47 days until election day, Biden took full advantage of the national spotlight to address the issues, call for unity and attack his opponent, President Donald Trump.
  • Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden speaks at the CNN Presidential Town Hall in Scranton, Pennsylvania, on Thursday, September 17, 2020. (Gabriella Demczuk for CNN)

    Biden showed his kind of leadership

    Opinion by Jess McIntosh
    For a couple of hours Thursday night, America was treated with honesty and compassion by a man who wants to hold its highest office. That could be the entire review right there, how jarring and unusual it was to visualize a president who could clear the extremely low bar of telling the truth and caring about pain. We've had presidents like that before, of course, but after a particularly brutal news week it was starting to feel like that kind of leadership belongs to a different era.
  • CHAPEL HILL, NC - AUGUST 18: A student walks through the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on August 18, 2020 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. The school halted in-person classes and reverted back to online courses after a rise in the number of COVID-19 cases over the past week. (Photo by Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images)

    College leaders deserve an F for their reopening

    Opinion by Kent Sepkowitz
    College life right now is a mess: there has been an explosion of Covid-19 cases on college campuses since some schools resumed in person. According to The New York Times weekly tally updated on September 10, there have been 88,000 Covid-19 cases across 1,190 college campuses. Of these, "more than 61,000 cases came since late August."
  • US President Donald Trump sits with ABC New anchor George Stephanopoulos ahead of a town hall event at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on September 15, 2020. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    Trump's bogus health care promise on display

    By Frida Ghitis
    President Donald Trump is used to taking questions from celebrity anchors at Fox News, who lob softballs greased with praise. His appearance in a town hall Tuesday night, held by ABC News, featuring questions from undecided voters in Pennsylvania, was an altogether different experience. Faced with demands for answers, Trump resorted to his standard lies about what he has done and what his rival, Democratic candidate Joe Biden, would do as president.
  • ABC town hall Ellesia Blaque

    Why I confronted Trump at the town hall in Philadelphia

    Opinion by Ellesia A. Blaque
    There are millions of people across the globe just like me. People beaten down by diseases we didn't ask for; diseases we were born with, or acquired. We are people who must face them on a daily basis, and for the rest of our lives, and for which we are minimized and ignored.
  • US President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House on September 16, 2020, in Washington, DC. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    Where's your health care plan, Mr. President?

    Opinion by John Avlon, CNN Senior Political Analyst
    Pandemics don't care about partisan politics. So when Robert Redfield — President Donald Trump's director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and a lifelong conservative — testified to Congress Wednesday that a Covid-19 vaccine wouldn't be ready before the election and probably would not be available to the general public until next summer, he was speaking as a scientist.
  • Historian: I watched 'Mulan' so you don't have to

    Opinion by Kelly Hammond
    With the new live-action version of "Mulan," Disney missed the mark with viewers in China and the United States. How did they mess this up so badly? There are numerous controversies surrounding the film's release, but most of them do not even have to do with the fact that the movie itself is a boring, drab and inaccurate mess. Although the story is well known around the world, the live-action movie is slow, repetitive, and lacking in any substantial character development.
  • SLUG: PH-WOUNDED 10/30/2009 CREDIT: NIKKI KAHN/THE WASHINGTON POST  WASHINGTON DC  U. S. Army First Lieutenant Dan Berschinski, 25, of Peach Tree City, Georgia, is photographed at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, D.C., on Friday, October 30, 2009. Berschinski was injured in Afghanistan and lost both of his legs after stepping on an IED in August.  (Photo by Nikki Kahn/The The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    I lost my legs fighting for America

    Opinion by Dan Berschinski
    In March of 2010, I sat in my wheelchair in a cramped kitchen in the basement of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center's amputee rehab clinic. A lone Secret Service agent stood quietly against one wall and I sat at a kitchen table. To my immediate left, with our elbows almost touching was then-Vice President Joe Biden. Across the table was his wife, Jill Biden, and also at the table were two other seriously wounded soldiers and our significant others.
  • Why America needs presidential debates

    Opinion by Diana B. Carlin and Mitchell S. McKinney
    It is unlikely that anyone would make a hiring decision without interviewing them, based only on some combination of the candidate's resume, testimonials from family members, social media comments and scurrilous accusations from anonymous critics. That's why we disagree with those who want to scrap presidential debates, the metaphorical equivalent of a presidential job interview.
  • US President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House on September 16, 2020, in Washington, DC. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    Unmasking Trump's real governing philosophy

    Opinion by Joe Lockhart
    Has America ever seen a presidential campaign like this one? One that involves a candidate as out-of-the-ordinary as President Donald Trump, with his small but rabid base, running for reelection during a global pandemic, a crushing economic crisis and a deadly season of back-to-back-to-back natural disasters?
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    America's devastating divorce from science

    Opinion by Naomi Oreskes
    What do you say about a 75-year-old dream that has died? In 1945, Vannevar Bush, the MIT dean who mobilized American science during World War II, laid out the blueprint for what would become the social contract between science and American society for the next half century.
  • Breonna Taylor

    What Breonna Taylor settlement misses

    Opinion by Jill Filipovic
    On Tuesday, the City of Louisville, Kentucky, finally settled a wrongful death lawsuit in the killing of Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old EMT shot dead in her own house by police officers who entered on a no-knock warrant. The settlement is for $12 million, every penny of which Taylor's family deserves, and not a single cent of which will bring her back.
  • A man waves an American flag on top of the Lincoln Memorial ahead of civil rights "2020 March on Washington", on August 27, 2020, in Washington, DC. - A civil rights rally timed to the 57th anniversary of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s seminal I Have a Dream speech, delivered in 1963 from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, is expected to bring thousands to the same spot on August 28, 2020. (Photo by Olivier DOULIERY / AFP) (Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images)

    Red and Blue America took different roads

    Opinion by Jeffrey Sachs
    America has been coming apart at the seams, with Democrats and Republicans increasingly unable of communicating with one another. Red states and blue states, as decided in the 2016 election, have confronted each other in incomprehension, and are leading very different lives with very different economic conditions. Reuniting America requires a forward-looking path of sustainable development that benefits all regions, including the states that have been hard hit by the long-term decline in manufacturing jobs.
  • President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a rally at Xtreme Manufacturing, Sunday, Sept. 13, 2020, in Henderson, Nevada.

    Trump's risky 'Hunger Games' rallies

    Opinion by Dean Obeidallah
    Welcome to Donald Trump's "Covid Hunger Games: Campaign edition." That's the only way to describe Trump's continued flouting at his campaign rallies of measures enacted to keep people safe from the coronavirus. We saw another example Saturday night when Trump held a rally in Nevada that violated the state's rules on limiting events to 50 people, ignored the state's mask mandate and jammed people on top of each other.
  • President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a news conference at the White House in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 10, 2020.

    Trump tries to quash two damaging stories

    Opinion by Richard Galant, CNN
    In Lewis Carroll's 1865 storybook for children of all ages, Alice jumps down a rabbit hole. It spools into a Wonderland where eating a cake can make you grow nine feet tall. A place where rabbits wear waistcoats and kid gloves. Where Dodo birds set the rules for running races. And where the grinning Cheshire Cat sits in a tree and tells Alice that if you don't care where you're going to wind up, it really "doesn't matter which way you go."
  • david legates todd pkg tsr 0914

    America's devastating divorce from science

    Opinion by Naomi Oreskes
    What do you say about a 75-year-old dream that has died? In 1945, Vannevar Bush, the MIT dean who mobilized American science during World War II, laid out the blueprint for what would become the social contract between science and American society for the next half century.
  • Why this Woodward book is devastating

    Opinion by Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst
    "Rage" may be Bob Woodward's most important book since "All the President's Men," in which he and Carl Bernstein laid out the history of Watergate.
  • 4 things our nation can do to feed hungry students

    Opinion by Ron Avi Astor
    Much of the talk on school reopenings has focused on technology, how to balance parent work and childcare with online schooling, best techniques to engage students online and social-emotional learning (SEL) strategies. However, amid a pervasive pandemic, students' more basic needs -- like housing, mental health, the connectivity gap and food -- are not the top priority at the national level. They should be.
  • White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany speaks during a briefing in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, DC on September 9, 2020.

    Kayleigh McEnany has crossed a line

    Opinion by Joe Lockhart
    Every single White House press secretary faces his or her own moment of truth on the job. Jerald terHorst, for example, resigned after just one month because he could not live with President Gerald Ford's decision to pardon his predecessor, President Richard Nixon.
  • STONE MOUNTAIN, GA - AUGUST 15: A woman argues with a far-right protester during a rally on August 15, 2020 near the downtown of Stone Mountain, Georgia. Georgia's Stone Mountain Park which is famous for its large rock carving of Confederate leaders planned to close on Saturday in response to a planned right-wing rally. (Photo by Lynsey Weatherspoon/Getty Images)

    Why America's two sides can't agree

    Opinion by John R. Hibbing
    In his August 20 acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention, Joe Biden said that "there is only one way forward. As a united America ... United in our dreams of a better future for us and for our children." He later asserted that, fortunately, we are indeed "united in our love of America and united in our love for each other."
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    Trump's risky rallies are straight out of 'Hunger Games'

    Opinion by Dean Obeidallah
    Welcome to Donald Trump's "Covid Hunger Games: Campaign edition." That's the only way to describe Trump's continued flouting at his campaign rallies of measures enacted to keep people safe from the coronavirus. We saw another example Saturday night when Trump held a rally in Nevada that violated the state's rules on limiting events to 50 people, ignored the state's mask mandate and jammed people on top of each other.
  • Why this Woodward book is devastating to Trump

    Opinion by Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst
    "Rage" may be Bob Woodward's most important book since "All the President's Men," in which he and Carl Bernstein laid out the history of Watergate.
  • NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 11:  The 'Tribute in Light' memorial lights up lower Manhattan near One World Trade Center on September 11, 2018 in New York City. The tribute at the site of the World Trade Center towers has been an annual event in New York since March 11, 2002. Throughout the country services are being held to remember the 2,977 people who were killed in New York, the Pentagon and rural Pennsylvania in the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.  (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

    After 9/11, terror has morphed

    Opinion by Farah Pandith and Jacob Ware
    As another anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks approaches, we are reminded of how far we've come in the fight against global terrorism. Al Qaeda's devastating blows 19 years ago targeting America's political, economic, and military summits turned us into a more vigilant nation, determined to prevent any future attacks against the homeland.
  • The American Flag waves before a game between the Mississippi State Bulldogs and the Tulane Green Wave on September 17, 2005 at Independence Stadium in Shreveport

    I'm a Muslim US Marine. I served on 9/11

    Opinion by Mansoor T. Shams
    Like many of us, I vividly remember where I was and what I was doing on 9/11. Nearly one year earlier, I had made one of the toughest decisions any young 18-year-old American could ever make -- I raised my hand to "support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies foreign and domestic" and became part of America's finest. I became a United States Marine.
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    Trump took the country for a spin around his bizarre fantasyland

    Opinion by Michael D'Antonio
    On Thursday afternoon during a news conference, President Donald Trump treated the country to a spin around his fantasyland, where he is a great leader besieged by meanies, and the needless death and suffering due to his failed response to the coronavirus pandemic are not worth acknowledging. Instead, he spoke about Fox News as if it is his security blanket and bashed Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden for using a teleprompter during his speeches.
  • The skyline in the distance behind Crissy Field is barely visible with smoke from wildfires Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2020, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

    In California, the sun never rose on Wednesday

    Opinion by Tess Taylor
    Wednesday, it was as if the sun never rose. Dawn was murky, and by 8 a.m., it seemed to get darker. A moldering reddish-bronze haze rose around us but also made no light. Inside the house, we re-lit our lamps against the gloaming. The windows swam black, and outside, all morning, above the trees, the sky glowed grisly red. Where we had left the windows open to the night breezes, our papers, clothes, combs and brushes were coated in a fine layer of ash. The air hung, gritty and oddly cold. It was hard not to feel a deep foreboding.
  • U.S. Attorney General William Barr and U.S. President Donald Trump are seen in the Oval Office of the White House on November 26, 2019 in Washington.

    Barr brings DOJ to a dark new low

    Opinion by Elie Honig
    Just when it seemed that Attorney General William Barr couldn't degrade the Justice Department any further with efforts to protect President Donald Trump's political fortunes, Barr has found a new low.
  • Presidential candidate Svetlana Tikhanovskaya holds a press conference the day after Belarus' presidential election in Minsk on August 10, 2020.

    The amazing bravery of three women

    Opinion by Frida Ghitis
    If Americans weren't consumed with the historic political contest at home, they would be riveted to the drama unfolding in Belarus.
  • The skyline in the distance behind Crissy Field is barely visible with smoke from wildfires Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2020, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

    In California, the sun never rose on Wednesday

    Opinion by Tess Taylor
    Wednesday, it was as if the sun never rose. Dawn was murky, and by 8 a.m., it seemed to get darker. A moldering reddish-bronze haze rose around us but also made no light. Inside the house, we re-lit our lamps against the gloaming. The windows swam black, and outside, all morning, above the trees, the sky glowed grisly red. Where we had left the windows open to the night breezes, our papers, clothes, combs and brushes were coated in a fine layer of ash. The air hung, gritty and oddly cold. It was hard not to feel a deep foreboding.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 30:  U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in the James Brady Briefing Room of the White House July 30, 2020 in Washington, DC. Earlier in the day Trump suggested in a tweet that November's general election should be postponed, citing his unsubstantiated assertions of widespread mail-in voter fraud amid the coronavirus pandemic.  (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    Two anniversaries Trump is dishonoring

    Opinion by Catherine Powell and Camille Gear Rich
    Last month, Americans celebrated the centennial of the 19th Amendment, recognizing women's right to vote. This celebration rings hollow -- as we hurtle toward the 2020 election -- if we fail to learn from the ways that race has been used to fracture women's efforts toward coalition politics and our collective understanding of our rights. For example, even as Senator Kamala Harris's historic role as the first woman of color to run for vice president on a major party ticket energizes feminist coalitions, Donald Trump's divisive manipulation of racial stereotypes seeks to fracture and obscure women's shared interests.
  • WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 09:  U.S. President Donald Trump reveals his list of potential Supreme Court nominees in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House on September 9, 2020 in Washington, DC. Trump also fielded questions about the coronavirus and Bob Woodward's new book about him. (Photo by Doug Mills-Pool/Getty Images)

    Trump damns himself

    Opinion by SE Cupp
    Just two days ago, the Trump campaign blasted an Atlantic story detailing the denigrating language the President allegedly used about fallen American troops for its author's use of anonymous sources.
  • Gender reveal parties a bad idea every way

    Opinion by Allison Hope
    If it weren't already a bad idea to throw a party without proper safety measures during a pandemic, one that sparks a massive forest fire is just arsenic-laced icing on the poison cake. A California family set off a "smoke-generating pyrotechnic device," causing a fire that is raging through the San Bernardino National Forest. The fire has burned thousands of acres, destroyed countless wildlife and may potentially cause a lot more devastation as the uncontrolled fire continues to burn.
  • The simple truth about teaching...and learning

    Opinion by Jay Parini
    As I'm about to begin a new semester online at Middlebury College, I'm reminded of James A. Garfield's comment that "the ideal college is Mark Hopkins on one end of a log and a student on the other." Hopkins was a philosopher (and later president) at Williams College, and he was a legendary teacher. This has always been my mantra: a teacher, a student and a log. That's all you really need for education to happen.
  • This picture taken on November 14, 2018 shows Lucy Sausiniaka speaking during an interview at a women's shelter in Port Moresby. - Ask people in Papua New Guinea about #MeToo and you are likely to get blank stares, but in a country with a reputation as the worst place in the world for women to live, attitudes to domestic and sexual violence are slowly changing. (Photo by Saeed KHAN / AFP) / TO GO WITH PNG-VIOLENCE-WOMEN, FOCUS BY ANDREW BEATTY        (Photo credit should read SAEED KHAN/AFP/Getty Images)

    A plague that will outlive Covid-19

    Opinion by Patricia Scotland
    Scientists across the world are working around the clock to supply a vaccine that could halt this devastating pandemic. Yet this deadly virus has once again highlighted how we also desperately need a cure for a completely different disease -- one which will sadly outlive Covid-19.
  • US President Donald Trump greets Marines aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Wasp (LHD 1) during a Memorial Day event in Yokosuka on May 28, 2019.

    Trump's stunning split with US's military leaders

    Opinion by Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst
    President Trump loves the pomp of the military. He went to a military-style boarding school in New York, he has always pined for a big Kremlin-style military parade in the streets of Washington DC and when he came into office he appointed retired and serving generals to key positions in his cabinet, to a greater degree than any other modern president.
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) and US President Donald Trump shake hands before a meeting in Helsinki, on July 16, 2018. (Photo by Brendan Smialowski / AFP)        (Photo credit should read BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)

    Trump is parroting Kremlin line on Navalny poisoning

    Opinion by Samantha Vinograd
    Let's call a lie a lie. It gets tiresome under President Donald Trump as his inaccurate statements pile up, but it's important that Americans are made aware that the President continues to lie about almost everything. Each new falsehood is unsurprising based on his track record with the truth -- but that doesn't make them any less dangerous. They pose risks to our democracy, including the security of our election in November.
  • Is Trump-Biden like 1992 -- or 1948?

    Opinion by Richard Galant, CNN
    Labor Day makes us think of trips to see friends and family, backyard barbecues and a few last, lazy moments of summertime freedom before school and work turn up the pace of life.
  • He used to be a 'hero.' Now he feels hated

    Opinion by Thomas Lake
    I remember how it felt in March, as the shadow began to fall. Empty shelves at the grocery stores. Sirens wailing in New York. And with the dread came a fleeting glimpse of national unity. We cheered from the balconies as the nurses changed their shifts. In Irvine, California, a medical worker saw a message in chalk from neighbor children: "Thank you so much for what you do." Someone put a sign outside his apartment. It said, "A hero lives here."
  • TOPSHOT - Medical personnel move a deceased patient to a refrigerated truck serving as make shift morgues at Brooklyn Hospital Center on April 09, 2020 in New York City. - America's coronavirus epicenter of New York recorded a new single-day high of 799 COVID-19 deaths Thursday but Governor Andrew Cuomo said the rate of hospitalizations continued to fall. (Photo by Angela Weiss / AFP) (Photo by ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images)

    How we can contain Covid-19 without a vaccine

    Opinion by William Haseltine
    While the world is waiting for a safe and effective Covid-19 vaccine, there is a strategy that can potentially bring an end to the pandemic in the United States without the development of pharmaceutical drugs. The strategy, which is cost-effective and compatible with American values like personal freedom, could feasibly bring the epidemic to a halt within two to three months.
  • Trump cannot comprehend true patriotism

    Opinion by Frida Ghitis
    President Donald Trump may admire the military, but he has shown his contempt for the people who decide to join it and serve the nation -- a decision he seems to find utterly incomprehensible. Americans have heard him disparage war heroes for years, from the late Sen. John McCain to the families of soldiers killed in battle. Americans who sacrifice everything for their country are not heroes in his view, but "losers" and "suckers," according to a new article in The Atlantic, which quotes multiple unnamed sources, including at least one retired four-star general. Trump has vehemently denied the report, but other news organizations separately corroborated some of the claims in the piece.
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    The 'rule' Barr may be willing to bend for Trump

    Opinion by Elie Honig
    If there was any question before about whether William Barr could be willing to use his power as attorney general to tilt the scales in the upcoming presidential election, there shouldn't be anymore. Barr appeared to confirm as much in his interview with Wolf Blitzer on CNN Wednesday: that he would be willing to breach longstanding Justice Department norms -- that is, the unwritten "60-day rule" -- to advantage the re-election campaign of President Donald Trump.
  • Dr. Ala Stanford administers a COVID-19 swab test on Wade Jeffries in the parking lot of Pinn Memorial Baptist Church in Philadelphia, Wednesday, April 22, 2020. Stanford and other doctors formed the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium to offer testing and help address heath disparities in the African American community. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

    Why I'm giving $100 million to Black medical schools

    Opinion by Michael R. Bloomberg, Wayne A. I. Frederick, David M. Carlisle, Valerie Montgomery Rice and James Hildreth
    The Black community has suffered the highest death rates from Covid-19, and the numbers are staggering. Black people are nearly three times more likely than White people to contract the virus, and twice as likely to die from it, according to a report from the National Urban League.
  • In this Feb. 14, 2018 photo, actor Chadwick Boseman poses for a portrait in New York to promote his film, "Black Panther."  Boseman, who played Black icons Jackie Robinson and James Brown before finding fame as the regal Black Panther in the Marvel cinematic universe, has died of cancer. His representative says Boseman died Friday, Aug. 28, 2020 in Los Angeles after a four-year battle with colon cancer. He was 43.

    Chadwick Boseman's death and what we must do

    Opinion by Fola May
    It is harder because it was so sudden. It is harder because it is a disease that I know all too well. It is harder because he was young, gifted and Black. It is harder because our community has already endured so much in this cold and callous year that is 2020.
  • Colleagues of US army First Lieutenant Todd W. Weaver embrace during a memorial ceremony in his honor at Combat Outpost Terra Nova on the outskirts the Arghandab Valley's Jellawar village on September 14, 2010.

    Retired general: Look for this in your next president

    Opinion by Mark Hertling
    If you ask people who haven't served in uniform what it takes to be a great military leader, many would say "strength," "toughness" or "courage." People who have served -- and particularly those who have had the honor of commanding -- will tell you there's a lot more to it. Leaders -- military or otherwise -- need character, intellect, vision, humility and will.
  • Doctors, unshackle our patients

    Opinion by Trisha Pasricha
    Jacob Blake, the victim of gunshot wounds that left him paralyzed from the waist down, was also shackled to his hospital bed for days. His father pleaded with health care officials and the media to open their eyes to this injustice -- or even to common sense. A man who is paralyzed poses no immediate risk that shackling him to the bed could prevent.
  • SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 02: U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) speaks during a Day of Action For the Children event at Mission Education Center Elementary School on September 02, 2020 in San Francisco, California. Nancy Pelosi is drawing criticism for patronizing a hair salon to get her hair done despite the salon being closed to in-person visits due to COVID-19 restrictions. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

    Trump's laughable slam of Nancy Pelosi

    Opinion by Jill Filipovic
    While President Donald Trump is threatening American democracy, fueling violence and strife, and continuing to make the US an outlier in coronavirus cases and deaths, he and his GOP minions want us to focus on Nancy Pelosi's hair.
  • President Donald Trump speaks at a news conference in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Monday, Aug. 31, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

    Trump's depraved plan to try to win reelection

    Opinion by Frida Ghitis
    President Donald Trump is right in believing most Americans don't want violence in their streets. But it's America's profound tragedy and grave danger that he, Trump, seems to want more of it.
  • Russia Alexey Navalny poison Novichok German officials Pleitgen vpx intl hnk vpx _00002007.jpg

    Who's standing up to Russia on Navalny poisoning? Not America

    Opinion by Michael Bociurkiw
    With the German government's announcement Wednesday of "unequivocal evidence" that the nerve agent Novichok was used in the poisoning of Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny, we are once again reminded how a vacuum in global leadership -- notably, in this instance, the silence of the American President -- can potentially open the way for the world's strongmen to reach for the deadliest means to silence their critics.
  • A poll worker at Liberty High School on July 7, 2020 in Jersey City, New Jersey. New Jersey residents will choose their candidates for president, Senate and House but because of the pandemic most are casting their votes by mail-in ballots.

    Why you should be a poll worker this year

    Opinion by Jonathan Diaz
    You've seen them. They check your name and voter registration when you arrive at your polling place, provide you with the correct ballot and hand you an "I Voted" sticker when you're done. They're poll workers: volunteers recruited and trained by county and local election officials to do the tough work of keeping our elections running.
  • This medical worker used to be a 'hero.' Now he feels hated

    Opinion by Thomas Lake
    I remember how it felt in March, as the shadow began to fall. Empty shelves at the grocery stores. Sirens wailing in New York. And with the dread came a fleeting glimpse of national unity. We cheered from the balconies as the nurses changed their shifts. In Irvine, California, a medical worker saw a message in chalk from neighbor children: "Thank you so much for what you do." Someone put a sign outside his apartment. It said, "A hero lives here."
  • An election worker opens envelopes containing vote-by-mail ballots for the August 4 Washington state primary at King County Elections in Renton, Washington on August 3, 2020.A sign explaining signature verification is pictured as vote-by-mail ballots for the August 4 Washington state primary are processed at King County Elections in Renton, Washington on August 3, 2020. (Photo by Jason Redmond / AFP) (Photo by JASON REDMOND/AFP via Getty Images)

    The solution in plain sight that states must choose

    Opinion by Josh Silver
    This year, as a result of the pandemic, we will likely see a dramatic increase in absentee voting, but some states will not verify or count those ballots before Election Day. This delay could be a major problem for American democracy, sowing doubt in the results and distrust in our electoral process.
  • Police try to secure the public safety building from protesters Monday, Aug. 24, 2020, in Kenosha, Wis.Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers has summoned the National Guard to head off another round of violent protests after the police shooting of a Black man under murky circumstances turned Kenosha into the nation's latest flashpoint city in a summer of racial unrest.  (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

    Ex-police chief: Police shouldn't welcome vigilantes

    Opinion by Cedric L. Alexander
    A bystander video recorded shortly before the fatal shooting of two people in Kenosha, Wisconsin, shows the accused shooter, Kyle Rittenhouse, with an assault-style rifle, milling among a group of other armed civilians claiming to be standing guard against people gathered to protest the police shooting, two days earlier, of Jacob S. Blake.
  • Where we need the most diverse team of advisers for US safety

    Opinion by Michèle A. Flournoy and Camille Stewart
    Joe Biden's selection of Sen. Kamala Harris as his running mate is a powerful statement of his commitment to ensuring that all Americans feel part of our democracy -- that government of the people, by the people and for the people applies to all Americans, be they men or women, White or Black, Asian or Latino, gay or straight, recent immigrants or descendants of families who have been here for generations. The Biden-Harris ticket is the first in US history to truly reflect the American people they aspire to serve.
  • What the Church of Trump is costing America

    Opinion by Peniel E. Joseph
    How did the President of the United States become one of the nation's largest threats to public health and safety? When one man became head of "church" and state: the Church of Trump, that is.
  • Editorial use only. No book cover usage.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Warner Bros/Kobal/Shutterstock (5878895i)
Robert Redford
The Candidate - 1972
Director: Michael Ritchie
Warner Bros
USA
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Political C'Paign US
Drama
Votez McKay

    Robert Redford: Answer this question

    Opinion by Robert Redford
    I'm not in the habit of quoting lines from movies I've appeared in, but every once in a while, something brings one of those old lines to mind. Recently, I've been thinking of a scene from a film I did in 1972 called "The Candidate."