Dems spurn Covid spending bill improvements
It’s popular now, but voters may regret the $2.5 trillion expense by November 2022.
It’s popular now, but voters may regret the $2.5 trillion expense by November 2022.
Only 68 per cent of a CPAC crowd of the former president’s fervent supporters want him to run in 2024.
Will Donald Trump double down on grievance or begin the arduous process of re-creating his image?
The master of the Senate isn’t going anywhere, whatever the ex-president says.
Joe Biden wants to dole out cheques and create new programs, not find a compromise.
Joe Biden’s actions as opposed to his words don’t suggest he’s interested in bipartisan progress.
How do you keep working class Donald Trump voters while winning back support in the suburbs?
He’s wrong to skip the inauguration, but he can still discourage any further violence.
What a mess. The GOP is bitterly split, Democrats will control the presidency, Senate and House, and 34 per cent of Americans wrongly believe the election was rigged.
Political strategist Karl Rove reviews which of his predictions came true, what he got wrong and predicts what’s going to happen in 2021.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/karl-rove/page/9