Tools
Change country:

America’s reactionary moment is here

Donald Trump, wearing a navy suit and a bright red tie, raises his right fist while standing in a crowd.
President-elect Donald Trump looks on during the UFC 309 event at Madison Square Garden on November 16, 2024, in New York City. | Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

It’s been two weeks since the presidential election and there has been no shortage of autopsies. If anything surprised me about the outcome, it’s not that Donald Trump won, but how he did it. The president-elect won all seven swing states and the popular vote, and seemed to gain ground with basically every demographic except college-educated women. That is a political reckoning for the Democratic Party.

All we can definitively say at this point is that there are many reasons for this electoral defeat and we just don’t know enough right now to parse it out in a satisfying way. But that doesn’t mean that we have no idea what happened.

What is fairly clear is that the roughly 76 million people who voted for Trump were saying “no” to something — or, to be more precise, they were saying “no” to lots of things. And I am genuinely interested in understanding what — apart from the Biden administration — so many people were rejecting, and what lessons we might be able to draw from that.

So in the aftermath of the election, I invited Vox’s own Zack Beauchamp on The Gray Area to talk about what we know and what it could mean for our political future. Beauchamp writes a newsletter for Vox called On the Right, which is all about the evolving nature of conservatism and the various ideas and movements driving it. He’s also the author of a recent book called The Reactionary Spirit.

We discuss the competing accounts of this election, the differences between conservative and reactionary parties, as well as some of the broader trends in democratic societies across the world. As always, there’s much more in the full podcast, so listen and follow The Gray Area on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pandora, or wherever you find podcasts. New episodes drop every Monday.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Sean Illing

Now that we’ve all had a little time to process it, what do you make of the election results?

Zack Beauchamp

I would say we should separate out two different things. One is our analysis of what’s happening, and the other is how we feel about what happened. Analytically, I think it’s still pretty early to have any really strong conclusions, but I will say that most of what people are saying as a result of that doesn’t make a lot of sense to me. If you notice, there’s a one-to-one correlation between someone’s very detailed account of what happened in the election and their own priors about how politics works.

You mentioned that Trump gained ground with basically every group, right? Well, that only happens, this kind of uniform swing, when there’s some big structural factor at play. The candidates that make sense to explain a shift from 2020 to 2024 are inflation, right? That’s new and has been politically potent everywhere, and historically, in the US it matters. And anti-incumbent sentiment, which is a worldwide fact and true in democracies around the world. But Harris’s biggest losses were in blue states, and that suggests that something is going on beyond messaging. Something else is happening.

Sean Illing

Let’s set aside the election for a minute, though we’re going to keep coming back to it. When someone asks you what is American conservatism in 2024, what is your answer?

Zack Beauchamp

It’s not conservatism. What we call the conservative movement today is not what the conservative movement historically has been in the United States. It’s a species of reactionary politics. The distinction rests in the party’s fundamental attitude towards democracy and democratic institutions. 

The old Republican Party, for all of its faults, played by the political rules. It had faith in the idea that elections determine the winner, and that when elections happen, you accept the verdict of the people and you adjust based on that regardless of whether or not you like the policy preferences. 

Reactionary parties are different from conservatism. They both share an orientation towards believing that certain ways in which society is arranged — certain setups, institutions, even hierarchies — are good and necessary. There’s value in the way that things are. What differs between the two of them is that conservative parties don’t see potential social change as an indictment of democracy. That is to say, even if a democracy or an election produces an outcome that they don’t like, that threatens to transform wholesale certain elements of the social order, a conservative would not throw out the political order as a consequence of that. Reactionaries are willing to do that.

My view is, at the core of the Trump movement, which I want to distinguish from every Trump supporter because they’re not the same, but the people who have given Donald Trump an iron grip on the Republican Party, that base of hardcore support, are animated primarily by reactionary politics, by a sense that things have gone too far in a socially liberal and culturally liberal, and even in some cases economically liberal direction, and they want things to go back to partially a past that never existed, but also a past that did exist where there was a little bit more order and structure in terms of who was in charge and what the rules were.

Sean Illing

What Trumpism seems to be, increasingly, is a rejection of the ruling elites, a rejection of the professional managerial class, which is more about class and culture than race and the preservation of traditional hierarchies. So how do you make sense of that?

Zack Beauchamp

When we talk about what Trumpism is, we need to specify what we’re talking about. And I don’t think [that means] looking at a general election and saying that every person who voted for Trump is necessarily a Trumpist. If somebody was considering voting for Harris or maybe voted for Democrats down ballot, it might not make sense to think of their behavior through a purely ideological lens, because they may not even have firm ideological beliefs. Many swing voters, if you look at the way they talk about politics, it’s sort of jumbled. Again, I’m not saying that they are bad for having jumbled views, but this is just a fact about people who don’t pay attention to politics very much.

If you look at Trump’s core supporters though, the story of racial and social grievance, anger about immigration, a sense of alienation from the United States after Obama really personalized the changing social order — all of that is remarkably consistent among the people who will turn out to vote for Trump in a Republican primary. It’s been true over and over again. The evidence is overwhelmingly strong. This is their core motivation in Trump politics and in being engaged in this movement. And nothing about this election result changes that. 

What that part of the story does is help us understand why Trump has gained control over one of our two major political parties, why it is that he crushed traditional Republicans who were unwilling to give those voters what they wanted in such clear terms, and those voters had become a majority of the Republican Party internally. And more than that, it’s why the bulk of Republicans rejected the 2020 election when previously they had believed elections were legitimate. It’s why so many people were willing to swallow the idea that Obama wasn’t born in the United States.

So that’s one category of explanation, but then we’re talking about shifts in coalitions between different elections, and here the analysis becomes a lot trickier because we’re not talking about what makes up the core of an ideological movement, because all of those voters are baked into voting for Trump no matter what. I mean, you have 46 or 47 percent of the electorate that’s not going to change their mind no matter what on both sides. Maybe that’s a bit of an exaggeration, but not much. So you end up having these voters in the middle, and what causes someone to change their votes between elections is not the same thing as what engages really highly motivated, highly ideological voters who make up a political movement. They’re swing voters, right? They’re not Trumpists in the clear sense just because they voted for Trump once. So collapsing that distinction leads to analytic mistakes. 

Sean Illing

I continue to have a hard time parsing out all the forces that are combining to scramble our politics. There’s so much alienation. It’s a very lonely society. Our democracy doesn’t feel very participatory for lots of people, so there’s not enough investment in it. I think social media, media fragmentation more generally, the collapse of consensus reality — it’s all been very destabilizing. And I’m just going to keep saying that I think millions of people have never experienced real political disorder, so they take liberal democracy for granted and frankly don’t take politics very seriously. They’re entertained by Trump. They think he’s funny, and maybe he’ll make eggs a little cheaper and also drive annoying coastal elites insane and that’s kind of it for plenty of people.

Zack Beauchamp

Yeah, I think that’s true for a lot of people. Especially that point about taking liberal democracy for granted. When you live in a political order for a long period of time, you start to take it as a baseline. This is the way that things are. It’s not that you can’t even envision fundamental change — it’s that you don’t even have the vocabulary necessary or the sense of perspective necessary to believe that you should be envisioning radical change. It just doesn’t enter into your daily life.

If you look at interviews with swing voters and the way that they talk about politics or when you talk to them yourselves, the sense that you get is not that these people are like, “I want to burn American democracy to the ground.” It’s that they’ve got a choice between two candidates, like they do every election, and they pick the one who represents whatever their grievances are at this moment in time or whatever their anger or frustration or even hopes and dreams are at this moment in time. Lots of different things go into for a voter that changes their mind election to election, what speaks to that. And the stuff about who Trump really is and what he really stands for, the system-threatening part of it, just doesn’t even register because it seems too remote to feel real.

Sean Illing

I don’t think Trump is really committed to anything. I have always felt that his political genius consists in making himself into an avatar onto which people can project whatever they need to project and he’s so well-equipped to be this kind of vehicle. I genuinely do not think he cares about anything other than himself. I mean, if the man had to choose between preserving liberal democracy for another century or building a beautiful new golf course in Saudi Arabia, is there any doubt he’d build the fucking golf course?

Zack Beauchamp

No, but I think that that’s a mistake. Because it’s not that he doesn’t have a commitment to democracy in the sense that he’s not attached to it. He doesn’t like it. He doesn’t like the idea that he can’t do whatever he wants when he gets power. He gets very angry when people say, “You can’t do that,” or, “That’s illegal.” And he openly admires leaders in other countries who have either always been authoritarians, like Xi Jinping in China, or who have torn down their own democracies like Putin [in Russia] or Viktor Orbán in Hungary. He thinks that they’re strong and that it’s great that they get to do stuff like that.

This is not an ideological commitment to authoritarianism, either. It’s not like Trump has a sincere belief that authoritarian systems work better or deliver better in some kind of meaningful sense. It’s a gut level “I like that. I want to be like that.” It’s when he said in those comments that were recently reported, “I want generals like Hitler’s generals,” it’s not like he was saying, “I want generals who will follow my orders to exterminate the Jews.” He’s saying, “I want people who listen to me and do the things that I say, whatever those things are, however crazy they might seem.” In that sense, he has a gut-level authoritarianism, and it’s reactionary in the sense that he very clearly hates a lot of the social change that has happened. 

Sean Illing

Do you think our institutions will continue to hold? 

Zack Beauchamp

Yeah. I mean, I don’t think there’s any reason to expect that elections will be formally abolished by 2028 in the way that some wild-eyed commentators in social media have suggested. I think there is a moderate chance that the fairness of our elections will be severely undermined by then. And I think there is a very high chance that some of the core institutions of American democracy will be damaged in ways that have significant long-term consequences. 

Put differently, I don’t think this election itself is the end of American democracy. I do think it is the beginning of the greatest test American democracy has seen since the Civil War of its resilience, and the outcome of that test is not determined and there is a range of probabilities, ranging from truly catastrophic to merely somewhat bad.

Sean Illing

What makes this to you a more significant test than the first Trump administration?

Zack Beauchamp

It’s the degree to which they have clear and cogent plans about what they want to do, and the anti-democratic nature of those plans. Coming into office last time, Trump didn’t have a vendetta against large chunks of the government. He didn’t believe an election had been stolen from him and that needed to be rectified. At the very least, he thinks it is a public blemish that needs to be shown to be false to many people, because if many people believe that he won, then that’s good enough. It doesn’t matter if he actually did. What matters, to put it differently, is Donald Trump’s honor, and the honor of Donald Trump must be avenged at all costs, and the insult of 2020 must be erased from the history books. That’s the kind of thing that he cares about.

The degree and scope of the planning that has gone into this and the willingness to take a hammer to different institutions and the specificity of the plans for doing so is not normal. To name just one example from Project 2025, they want to prosecute the former Pennsylvania secretary of state who presided over the 2020 elections using the [Ku Klux] Klan Act, which was passed to fight the first Klan. It’s basically alleging that by trying to help people fix improperly filed mail-in ballots in 2020, this Pennsylvania secretary of state was rigging the election, trying to undermine everyone else’s fair exercise of their votes in a way akin to the Klan intimidating Black voters in the 1860s by threatening to lynch them. 

When I speak to legal experts about this, they’re like, “No credible prosecutor I know would bring such a charge.” It’s a real abuse of power and anti-democratic in many ways because it’s trying to wield federal power to prevent local authorities from administering elections properly and helping people vote. So in order to try to even begin an investigation on this front, let alone actually prosecute, what you need to do is fire the people who would do that kind of job, which would typically be in the Justice Department Civil Rights Division role, so the Election Crimes Unit and the Criminal Division, fire those people who work on these cases, bring in attorneys who are willing to do what you say, even though it’s ludicrous on the basis of a traditional read of the law, and then initiate an investigation, try to get charges spun up, and then get them to a judge like Aileen Cannon, who’s presiding over Trump’s documents case and has clearly shown herself to not really care about what’s going on, but rather just to interpret the law in whatever way is most favorable to Trump.

All of that stuff, and this is just one specific example, illustrates the ways in which doing what Trump and his allies have outlined as part of their revenge campaign requires attacking very fundamental components of American democracy: the building blocks, like the rule of law, like a nonpartisan civil service that treats all citizens equally, like a judiciary that’s designed with interpreting the law as best as it can, rather than delivering policy outlines, you need all of those things in order to act on already offered promises in what is widely understood to be the planning document for the Trump administration.

Sean Illing

As hard as it is to believe, there’s a shelf life to Trump’s political career and there are people who think our situation will be drastically better the day he leaves. I’m not so sure about that. Are you?

Zack Beauchamp

Well, I agree with you in brief, but to build on what you’re saying, let’s say Trump dies in office. Then you get President JD Vance, who shares some very similar ideological commitments to the people who want to tear down American democracy. So there’s that. There’s the fact that Trumpist politics have paid off in two presidential elections for Republicans, and I just can’t imagine being a Republican strategist right now and saying what we need to do is go back to 2012. Because even if all you care about is narrowly winning elections, then you’re going to try to be Trump rather than the pre-Trump GOP. There will be a lot of people trying to take up the mantle of Trump’s successor in the Republican Party, and that means doing a lot of the same things that he did.

Sean Illing

But can they do that effectively? Can anyone else do what Trump has done? 

Zack Beauchamp

I’m very skeptical of that. If you look comparatively at authoritarian parties that work inside democracies, many of them are led by singular charismatic figures. Not all, but many of the successful ones. There’s this saying in Indian politics that Narendra Modi is the man who has a 56-inch chest. And it’s not literally true, but it’s one of many things that isn’t about him that his supporters say when you talk to them. This sort of mythologizing and grandiose comments stem from Modi’s outsized personality and his ability to connect as a figure with supporters of his party and with a lot of ordinary Indians who might not have supported his party in the past. And I think Trump is much the same way. And that appeal, first of all, is not fixed. Modi, while he won reelection this year, his party took a major hit. They lost their parliamentary majority, and of course Trump lost in 2020.

But second is, what happens when he’s gone? We know that this is a huge problem for authoritarian parties in authoritarian countries. They’re often nasty fights over what happens after the big man dies. That seems equally true in authoritarian factions inside democracies, because part of what makes them authoritarian is that they put one guy in charge, and it’s not clear who’s next unless you have something like a monarchy where the rules of succession are clear. But even then, who doesn’t know about nasty fights inside monarchies over who is the true heir to the throne? It’s just a fact of life when you’re not having things settled through a normal democratic procedure.

So I just don’t know what’s going to happen after Trump is gone. I can guess, and I think a lot will depend on how his administration manages American public opinion. Not only did Trump end his presidency historically unpopular, but even now, he’s unpopular. There’s a lot of people who really don’t like him, and many of the swing voters could be turned off by things that happened during his presidency, especially if it’s as disruptive as it seems like it might be to ordinary people’s lives.

Listen to the rest of the conversation and be sure to follow The Gray Area on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pandora, or wherever you listen to podcasts. 


Read full article on: vox.com
Hakeem Jeffries wins reelection as House Democratic leader
In line to become the House speaker, Jeffries remains the highest ranking Black elected official in Congress, and the first to hold the job of party leader.
6 m
latimes.com
Hacker stole documents from file-sharing server used in Gaetz civil case: Sources
A hacker gained access to an online document-sharing file between attorneys involved in a civil lawsuit brought by a close friend of former Rep. Matt Gaetz, sources say.
8 m
abcnews.go.com
Is letting your dog do this in the grocery store too much? Debate sparked over ‘gross’ act
A controversial photo of a dog sitting inside a supermarket trolley has sparked intense debate among shoppers.
nypost.com
Trump says he is naming former Wisconsin Rep. Sean Duffy to be transportation secretary
Duffy is a former reality TV star who was one of Trump’s most visible defenders on cable news — a prime concern for the media-focused president-elect.
latimes.com
Brazilian police arrest 5 over alleged coup plot involving plans to kill President Lula
According to the investigation, the coup plotters also planned to kill Vice President Geraldo Alckmin and Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes.
latimes.com
The stunning success of vaccines in America, in one chart
A teenage boy is vaccinated against smallpox in New York in March 1938. | Harry Chamberlain/FPG/Hulton Archive/Getty Images Measles, mumps, and polio are supposed to be diseases of the past. In the early to mid-20th century, scientists developed vaccines that effectively eliminated the risk of anyone getting sick or dying from illnesses that had killed millions over millennia of human history. Vaccines, alongside sanitized water and antibiotics, have marked the epoch of modern medicine. The US was at the cutting edge of eliminating these diseases, which helped propel life expectancy and economic growth in the postwar era. Montana native Maurice Hilleman, the so-called father of modern vaccines, developed flu shots, hepatitis shots, and the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine in the 1950s and ’60s, which became virtually universally adopted among Americans. !function(){"use strict";window.addEventListener("message",(function(a){if(void 0!==a.data["datawrapper-height"]){var e=document.querySelectorAll("iframe");for(var t in a.data["datawrapper-height"])for(var r=0;r
vox.com
"Gladiator II" actors talk sequel, preparations and more
Actors Pedro Pascal, Joseph Quinn and Fred Hechinger talk about the upcoming release of "Gladiators II," 25 years after the original "Gladiator" movie, and what it was like working with director Ridley Scott.
cbsnews.com
Border state governor vows to defy Trump's ‘misguided’ mass deportation push
Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs says that her state will not be supporting a mass deportation operation next year by the Trump administration -- making her he latest official to oppose it.
foxnews.com
Will enrolling in a credit card debt management program hurt your credit?
Certain debt relief strategies can have a negative impact on your credit — but is debt management one of them?
cbsnews.com
Rangers get best possible injury news on Filip Chytil
It’s the best-case scenario for the Rangers center.
nypost.com
What is a bomb cyclone?
The Pacific Northwest is preparing for heavy rain from a storm that's fueled by bomb cyclone and an atmospheric river. Meteorologist Jessica Burch has more on what exactly a bomb cyclone is and how they develop.
cbsnews.com
Fox News Entertainment Newsletter: Eva Longoria denies leaving US for Trump, Alec Baldwin's 'SNL' disaster
The Fox News Entertainment Newsletter brings you the latest Hollywood headlines, celebrity interviews and stories from Los Angeles and beyond.
foxnews.com
Spirit midfielder Croix Bethune claims NWSL rookie of the year honors
The 23-year-old playmaker tied the league’s assists record despite suffering a season-ending knee injury in August.
washingtonpost.com
Are Pete Hegseth’s tattoos symbols of ‘Christian nationalism’?
President-elect Donald Trump’s new Pentagon pick, Pete Hegseth, is being blasted for tattoos that are allegedly symbols of White supremacy and Christian nationalism. What are these symbols and what do they mean?
foxnews.com
How comedian Adam Ray turned a gag Dr. Phil impersonation into a Netflix special with the man himself
On Tuesday, Netflix premieres Ray's latest special, 'Adam Ray Is Dr. Phil UNLEASHED.' The actor steps into the role of Dr. Phil to sit down with none other than the real Dr. Phil.
latimes.com
Jets fire Joe Douglas six weeks after dumping Robert Saleh
Joe Douglas joined Robert Saleh in those paying for the Jets failures.
nypost.com
Many Americans doing more good deeds to make up for 2024
Four in 10 Americans are actively doing more good deeds before the end of 2024 — to make up for the rest of the year.
nypost.com
Analysis: Dodgers to meet with Juan Soto, signaling more big spending is possible
The Dodgers are already well on their way to paying luxury tax penalties for a fifth consecutive year. But the Dodgers are not facing typical financial restraints either.
latimes.com
Dating trend sending Gen Z overseas to look for boyfriends
There is a strange dating phenomenon happening across the country, and its enough to make young, single Aussies consider heading overseas.
nypost.com
Jake Paul had the same reaction as everyone else when seeing Mike Tyson’s butt on Netflix
Jake Paul had the same reaction as everyone watching live on Netflix when Mike Tyson's bare butt was shown during the stream before their fight.
nypost.com
Judiciary Committee senators suggest a Gaetz confirmation hearing could get fiery
Sen. John Cornyn seemed to suggest one way info about Gaetz could come out is by calling those associated with the allegations to appear before the Judiciary Committee.
abcnews.go.com
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs sacrificed bird before 1999 NYC shooting verdict, former bodyguard claims
The disgraced mogul stopped off for the bizarre ritual in Central Park while on the way to court to hear the verdict, his bodyguard claimed.
nypost.com
Romanian court finds irregularities in prosecutors' case against Andrew Tate
The ruling by the Bucharest Court of Appeals is a major setback for Romania’s anti-organized crime agency, DIICOT, which must act within five days.
latimes.com
Jenna Bush Hager Reveals The Hilarious Nickname Her Daughter Gave Her Because She’s “Crusty”
For those keeping track at home, this is in addition to the bizarre Kardashian nickname she used to call her.
nypost.com
FEMA director vows to request IG investigation into order to avoid Trump supporters' houses
FEMA Director Deanne Criswell says she will request an inspector general investigation into orders for workers to avoid pro-Trump homes.
foxnews.com
Jennifer Lawrence, Malala Yousafzai team up for new film about Afghan women
Jennifer Lawrence and Malala Yousafzai join Afghan filmmaker Sahra Mani to reveal the struggles of women living under Taliban rule in the documentary, "Bread and Roses."
cbsnews.com
Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall’s son says young people 'not aware of the past,' don't know his famous parents
Humphrey Bogart, the Oscar winner and original Rat Pack member who starred in films like “Sabrina," “The Maltese Falcon" and “The African Queen," died in 1957. He was 57.
foxnews.com
Cher drops F-bomb on live TV, blames Hoda Kotb for giving her permission to curse
"Ok, we didn't have the seven second [delay], but we will for the next feed," Kotb said after the on-air blunder.
nypost.com
Calls grow for public release of Gaetz report from House Ethics Committee
Some lawmakers in Congress are pushing for the House Ethics Committee to release their report on misconduct allegations against Matt Gaetz, President-elect Donald Trump's choice for attorney general. CBS News congressional correspondent Seth MacFarlane has more.
cbsnews.com
Earliest ‘Jesus is God’ inscription found — deemed ‘greatest discovery since the Dead Sea Scrolls’
Scientists are going gaga over the earliest inscription declaring "Jesus is God," claiming that this 1,800-year-old engraving could change our understanding of Christianity.
nypost.com
Millions across the US will be blasted by winter storms ahead of busy Thanksgiving travel
This comes as millions of people across the U.S. prepare to hit the road and pack airports ahead of Thanksgiving.
nypost.com
‘The View’ Reacts In Fury To Nancy Mace’s “Disgusting” Bathroom Bill As They Accuse Her Of “Bullying” Trans Colleague Sarah McBride
Whoopi Goldberg called for unity as she said, "Be not afraid of your trans brothers and sisters."
nypost.com
Chris Russo goes on epic rant on Jake Paul-Mike Tyson Netflix fight with NFL warning
The Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson boxing match gave Chris Russo something new to be mad about.
nypost.com
Amid nine-game skid, Wizards coach questions team’s competitiveness
Brian Keefe takes the blame after back-to-back blowout losses to the Pistons and Knicks.
washingtonpost.com
Nov 19: CBS News 24/7, 10am ET
Russia says it will "act accordingly" after the Kremlin accuses Ukraine of launching missiles into the country; FEMA administrator testifies on Capitol Hill.
cbsnews.com
Behar Rejects Trump Mandate --- Get That 'Out of Your Mouth'
Joy Behar rejects President-elect Donald Trump won the November 5 election with a mandate. The post Behar Rejects Trump Mandate — Get That ‘Out of Your Mouth’ appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Report: Islamic State Harnesses TikTok to Drive Resurgence in Canada
Canadian police are disrupting a growing number of Islamic State terrorist plots in major cities, a resurgence driven by ISIS recruiting young Canadians to its ranks. The post Report: Islamic State Harnesses TikTok to Drive Resurgence in Canada appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
Are Trump supporters of color racist or misogynists? Black Trump voters in Detroit react
Black supporters of President-elect Donald Trump reacted to the notion that Americans who voted for the incoming GOP presidential candidate are racist and misogynist.
foxnews.com
ESPN star getting 'very, very worried' about Jerry Jones, has Joe Biden in mind
ESPN star Stephen A. Smith expressed concerns for Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones after the team's loss to the Houston Texans on Monday night.
foxnews.com
Isla Fisher pokes fun at newly single status in airline commercial
It looks like Isla Fisher’s love life is cleared for takeoff! The actress joked about being single in a new airline commercial, after announcing her divorce from Sacha Baron Cohen. Watch the full video to learn more about Isla poking fun at her new relationship status. Subscribe to our YouTube for the latest on all...
nypost.com
Judge expected to reveal next steps in Trump sentencing in "hush money" case
A New York judge is set to decide how to move forward with President-elect Donald Trump's conviction and sentencing in his "hush money" case. CBS News investigative reporter Graham Kates has more.
cbsnews.com
A New Era of Climate Geopolitics is Playing Out at COP29
The questions in Baku are less about whether the international climate push will go on but about how.  
time.com
CNN's Jennings: 'I Did Not Expect Hitler to Get So Many Meeting Requests'
Monday on CNN's "Newsnight," network contributor Scott Jennings reacted to the meetings President-elect Donald Trump hosted with President Joe Biden and MSNBC personalities Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski. The post CNN’s Jennings: ‘I Did Not Expect Hitler to Get So Many Meeting Requests’ appeared first on Breitbart.
breitbart.com
CNN’s Dana Bash ‘doesn’t know what side of the aisle’ neo-Nazi marchers in Ohio come from
Bash, who was recently accosted by a left-wing pro-Palestinian demonstrator at a Philadelphia area synagogue, anchored Monday's edition of CNN's "Inside Politics."
nypost.com
New Tech Platforms Help Legal Immigrants
foxnews.com
Cher confesses Sony Bono marriage drove them to thoughts of murder and suicide in darkest moments
Music icon Cher detailed her rocky relationship with Sonny Bono and how it drove her to thoughts of suicide multiple times. The "Believe" singer admitted Bono thought about "throwing" her off a balcony.
foxnews.com
10 winter golf essentials to help you stay warm and perform for all 18 holes
Here’s what you need to bring your A game no matter the temperature.
foxnews.com
Walmart sees higher-income shoppers as a key to holiday sales growth
Households earning more than $100,000 made up 75 percent of its Walmart’s market share gains in the third quarter, chief executive Doug McMillon said.
washingtonpost.com