How Trump’s Second Term Is Already Different From His First
The new president’s advisers have become masters of the government bureaucracy they have promised to upend.
It Is Happening Every Day, Every Where
The new president’s advisers have become masters of the government bureaucracy they have promised to upend.
The high popularity that the Ukrainian president had in the early days of the Russian invasion, with an approval rating of about 90 percent, has dipped badly.
The nation’s politics are going to change in President Trump’s second term — though we don’t yet know how.
Donald Trump’s pledge-filled speech made him sound like a candidate trying to run up the score.
In his second inaugural address, the president reprised dark themes from his first and laid out an expansive policy agenda.
The ego-stroking message to the man who once famously declared, “I Alone Can Fix It,” was clear.
A new poll found the public is sympathetic to the president-elect’s plans to deport migrants and reduce America’s presence overseas.
President-elect Donald J. Trump was the first Republican to win the popular vote in two decades, but by only a 1.5-point margin, the narrowest since 2000.
To the departing president, F.D.R. seemed a guiding, if often elusive, star.
Donald Trump has long sought to make anything he controls bigger.