Baker: “The most important work news organizations do is investigative”
President Biden invoked Martin Luther King Jr. in his opinion article in the Washington Post yesterday and celebrated Bidenomics, contrasting it with trickle-down economics, saying it “promised prosperity but failed America”. South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem would disagree. She wrote in Fox News that he “has crashed America’s once-proud economy into the ground, driving down wages while propelling inflation and the national debt to unheard-of heights.”
Hajar Yazdiha in her opinion piece in The Hill blamed “conservative backlash” for turning King's dream into a nightmare. Today, Gerard Baker wrote in The Wall Street Journal, “The most important work news organizations do is investigative—exposing nefarious or incompetent behavior by institutions and individuals.” Juan Williams wrote in The Hill that the Republican Party is unable to deal with extremism. Byron York wrote in the Washington Examiner that Trump opponents are entertaining using Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to disqualify Trump from office.
Steven Lubet wrote in an opinion piece for CNN that Trump would waive the 5th Amendment protection against self-incrimination upon taking the stand. At the end of July, writing for the Epoch Times, Darlene McCormick Sanchez quoted Hans von Spakovsky: “Schools often teach that the Constitution is a tool of discrimination that must be uprooted.” Mark Levin wrote in Fox News that when the grand jury process is violated by prosecutors, “it is especially important that the Fifth Amendment not be abused and violated.”
Writing for Vox, Heather Digby Parton was not impressed that Vivek Ramaswamy graduated from Harvard and Yale, comparing the “charismatic gadfly” to Trump in that they both disregard rules and norms. Ramaswamy wrote in The American Conservative that “the longer the war in Ukraine goes on, it becomes ever clearer that there is only one winner: China”.
In Svante Myrick's opinion piece for The Hill, he wrote that Republicans “make misleading claims about pro-choice policies to distract attention from their attacks on freedom”. While Myrick wrote that “most Americans believe abortion should be legal in most cases”, Jordan Boyd in The Federalist wrote that "Abortion until birth is unpopular with a majority of Americans”.
Hajar Yazdiha in her opinion piece in The Hill blamed “conservative backlash” for turning King's dream into a nightmare. Today, Gerard Baker wrote in The Wall Street Journal, “The most important work news organizations do is investigative—exposing nefarious or incompetent behavior by institutions and individuals.” Juan Williams wrote in The Hill that the Republican Party is unable to deal with extremism. Byron York wrote in the Washington Examiner that Trump opponents are entertaining using Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to disqualify Trump from office.
Steven Lubet wrote in an opinion piece for CNN that Trump would waive the 5th Amendment protection against self-incrimination upon taking the stand. At the end of July, writing for the Epoch Times, Darlene McCormick Sanchez quoted Hans von Spakovsky: “Schools often teach that the Constitution is a tool of discrimination that must be uprooted.” Mark Levin wrote in Fox News that when the grand jury process is violated by prosecutors, “it is especially important that the Fifth Amendment not be abused and violated.”
Writing for Vox, Heather Digby Parton was not impressed that Vivek Ramaswamy graduated from Harvard and Yale, comparing the “charismatic gadfly” to Trump in that they both disregard rules and norms. Ramaswamy wrote in The American Conservative that “the longer the war in Ukraine goes on, it becomes ever clearer that there is only one winner: China”.
In Svante Myrick's opinion piece for The Hill, he wrote that Republicans “make misleading claims about pro-choice policies to distract attention from their attacks on freedom”. While Myrick wrote that “most Americans believe abortion should be legal in most cases”, Jordan Boyd in The Federalist wrote that "Abortion until birth is unpopular with a majority of Americans”.