Philip Bump
MS NOW Contributor
Philip Bump is a data journalist and creator of the “How To Read This Chart” newsletter. He spent 11 years at The Washington Post and is the author of the 2023 book “The Aftermath.”
Philip Bump
MS NOW Contributor
Philip Bump is a data journalist and creator of the “How To Read This Chart” newsletter. He spent 11 years at The Washington Post and is the author of the 2023 book “The Aftermath.”
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Philip Bump
The president says the Iran War is “way ahead of schedule,” but won’t explain what victory would look like. There’s a pattern here.
New polling shows Americans remain skeptical of Trump’s leadership as president — including on what was once his strongest issue: the economy.
Election results in Texas and North Carolina have Democrats dreaming big about “turning” red states blue.
The unpopularity of Trump and this conflict make it less likely that he’ll be swayed by public opinion.
As is sometimes the case with Trump’s false statements, this one appears to be a misrepresentation of an assertion made by someone else.
Republicans on the ballot need robust GOP support and turnout, and the president didn’t give them much to work with.
What Elon Musk was really getting at when he incorrectly claimed “American culture” is of “English-Scotts-Irish origin.”
Republicans defending the SAVE Act say, “You have to use an ID to show you’re 21 if you want to drink, so why not do the same for voting?” Here’s why that’s nonsensical.
All of the job growth since Trump returned to the White House has been in the private sector — mostly in health care and social assistance.
Data from the Office of Personnel Management lays out how the composition of the federal government shifted during Trump’s first year back in the White House.