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11.12.18 | 6:29 pm
TPM at 18

Tomorrow we celebrate 18 years of continuous publication here at TPM. Drop us a line. What’s your favorite TPM memory? Who’s your favorite TPM alum? Perhaps most important, what would you like to see from TPM in the coming year? Send in your emails with subject line “TPM 18”.

11.12.18 | 3:28 pm
Site Status

We are aware that comments, The Hive and the Prime RSS feed are currently offline. Our team is working to bring them back online as soon as possible. We appreciate your patience.

11.12.18 | 2:03 pm
Trump’s Post Election Dip Is No Surprise
on August 27, 2018 in Washington, DC.

Gallup is out with its weekly Trump approval number today and he’s down at 38% approval, 56% disapproval. That’s one of his lowest numbers all year. Polls go up and down of course. But there’s a point I want to make that goes beyond what appears to be Trump’s permanent ping-ponging between 36% and 42% public approval. Put simply, I doubt it will be an accident or momentary that President Trump’s support goes down post-election. Partisanship is a heavy constraining force on public support in this era. Read More

11.11.18 | 6:54 pm
TPM 18

In two days, TPM will celebrate 18 years of continuous publication.

11.11.18 | 5:48 pm
A Good Book for This Centenary

I thought I would observe the centenary of the end of World War I and Veterans’ Day with a book recommendation: The Vanquished: Why the First World War Failed to End. This is a powerful, deeply important book. Today we are observing the century since the armistice that ended the First World War. But this anniversary obscures a reality this book explores with great depth and hideous illumination. In the West, mainly for England, France, and Belgium, the war took a catastrophic toll. But it was conducted largely within accepted distinctions between combatants and civilians. Just as importantly it ended with a rapid and full transition from war to peace, hostilities to demobilization. The history is dramatically different the further we look to the east. Read More

11.10.18 | 11:31 pm
Russian Fake News Operative Detained by FBI?

Alexander Malkevich runs an outfit called USA Really, a kind of Russia Today/RT on steroids, basically a Russian-financed news operation the aim of which is to portray the USA as in a state of tumult and chaos. Admittedly this is probably an easier case to make than it might have been in the past. Needless to say, Malkevich, a Russian national is an epic Trump. Here’s how McClatchy described it in June … Read More

11.10.18 | 9:48 pm
McSally’s Ace in the Hole

Here’s one notable side note to the Arizona Senate contest, which now seems very likely to end with Kyrsten Sinema as Sen-Elect.

Martha McSally has very conspicuously not gone the route of Rick Scott in Florida. She’s not claiming the election is being stolen or making allegations of voter fraud. She’s basically letting the counting go on.  That has reportedly angered national Republicans who want her to do just that. Good for her. But it’s important to note that McSally’s interests are really not aligned with those of the national party. Read More

11.10.18 | 6:40 pm
The Terrain Comes Into View

Love TPM? Interested in a new way to support TPM’s work above the cost of a Prime membership? With the election behind us (at least election day) and a clearer view of the political terrain over the next two years, we’re firming up the outlines of where we will be taking TPM Inside over the next year, with an especial focus on congressional investigations, making sense of what increasingly looks like a true political realignment and more. Briefings, Q&A, a look inside our operations and evolving editorial plans, events and more. Find out more here and if you’re like to join, click right here. Members who sign up in the next two weeks become Launch Members and have their annual subscriptions extended through the end of January 2020.

11.10.18 | 12:02 pm
Churchill’s Grandson

11.10.18 | 8:07 am
Very Provisional Thoughts on Who will be the Democratic Nominee in 2020
WASHINGTON, DC - Senators Corey Booker (D-NJ) and Kamala Harris (D-CA) speak quietly during Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC on Tuesday September 4, 2018. (Photo by Melina Mara/The Washington Post)

I am on a book tour for The Nationalist Revival: Trade and Immigration and the Revolt against Globalization, and I invariably get asked whom the Democrats should run in 2020, and I thought on a quiet weekend when the President is (thank God) out of the country, and I am sitting around a hotel room in Berlin waiting to give a talk, I might run through my answer.

Read More