From Democratic control of the House to the Mueller investigation, Trump faces a challenging 2019.
It was an election that had something for everyone. And one that therefore leaves the future uncertain.
It should be easier to call local referendums in the UK. Politics is too important to be left to the politicians.
The President is a cut-price Andrew Jackson, a touchy, uneducated, intuitive patriot ready at a moment’s provocation to get into a fight.
Four key states, three house districts and two top governors’ races to watch as November 8 approaches.
The Conservative Party’s Vice Chair for International tells me about his priorities in the role.
The presumption of innocence should not be some empty piety. A nasty aspect of politics is that this principle is reversed when the headlines are bad enough.
Our treaty would be the most comprehensive ever. And it rests on mutual recognition, not top-down standardisation.
Delivering on his campaign promise to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and move the US embassy accordingly hasn’t helped.
In the age of fake news, sub-tweets and gaslighting, the Arizona senator stood out as a pillar of a bygone political era.
Accepting the Liberty Medal last year, he described his gratitude to be “a bit player in the extraordinary story of America”.
He served his country – and its allies – honourably.
Europe has no Madisons to make the case for federalism, while the Leavers patronise us by pretending that leaving is without risk.
All things considered, all roads point to a Democratic majority in the House of Representatives come November.
Anyone claiming the UK can negotiate meaningful free trade deals while locking itself into the EU rulebook is propagating a delusion.