The Lie Democrats Are Telling Themselves
Republicans aren’t the only party putting tribal loyalty ahead of basic truth.
![Photo of Joe Biden against a blue sky](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oTP_qb9MWBBFA7__eO1gujVmMhI=/932x0:2901x1969/80x80/media/img/mt/2024/07/h_16.00291570/original.jpg)
Republicans aren’t the only party putting tribal loyalty ahead of basic truth.
Biden needs to step aside—for the sake of his own dignity, for the good of his party, for the future of the country.
It’s high time the city properly recognized its greatest sports champion, a civil-rights hero who endured horrific racism during his time with the Celtics.
No matter the obstacles that Donald Trump creates for himself, Joe Biden’s candidacy remains an existentially risky, perhaps disastrous, proposition.
Just what the college unrest needed: political theater
The California governor has made clear that he’s not running for president in 2024. But he’s getting antsy.
A serious policy debate with the late senator could veer sharply into a one-man Borscht Belt on the Potomac.
It’s that he’s being reckless.
Full support of the former president has become almost banal among Republicans, like joining a grocery line.
In the final days before the primary, she showed herself more willing to attack Donald Trump and seize the ample vulnerabilities he provides. It’s a start.