Today on TAP: In which Democrats experience all-but-forgotten emotions—joy, hope, unity
Blueprints for conservative rule can’t get enough of the smear that fighting racism against Black people amounts to racism against white people.
The Sunshine State is putting public pension money into risky bonds that transfer risk away from insurance companies.
A bipartisan measure to accelerate clean energy and fossil fuel projects has no constituency in Congress right now.
Today on TAP: Tim Walz, in the best Minnesota traditions
Every longstanding presidential democracy has collapsed sooner or later. Our turn might be next.
It’s been a stunning run for the long-shot vice-presidential nominee, but his recent activity in Minnesota really mirrors what Kamala Harris will face legislatively if she wins.
We’re moving toward replacing cable TV with a bundle of streaming networks. Will local and news programming get lost in the transition?
The Federal Reserve should have cut rates months ago. Now it might be too late.
Tom Tomorrow brings you This Modern World
Today on TAP: The Justice Department just won its case against Google.
The times are right for a socialist agenda that America can accept. We even have examples of it in practice.
A mailer supporting New Hampshire House candidate Maggie Goodlander is from a pro-veteran PAC that Bezos and his parents gave millions to.
It puts Israel in greater peril, but it may just keep him in power—and out of the clink.
The presidential campaign’s policy director and deputy chief of staff are sitting with Hoffman on a “Business Leaders for Harris” Zoom call.
Today on TAP: Can Biden prevent a steady drift to regional war?
What can each vice presidential frontrunner tell us about Kamala Harris’s priorities?
Private equity firms are maneuvering to invest in college athletes, their schools, and the conferences they play in. The deals could add risk to the whole system.
The governor of California proposes to solve the problem by harassing people in circles.
Kamala Harris has made some gestures in the direction of rejecting big-money entreaties. That’s the right move, but there’s more to be done.