JOURNALISM
Look out, world — the Jekyll and Hyde president has a nose for weakness
‘In the small hours of one morning,” Fanny Stevenson recalled, “I was awakened by cries of horror from Louis” — the author Robert Louis Stevenson. Thinking he was having a nightmare, she woke him up. “Why did you wake me?” he said angrily. “I was dreaming a fine bogey tale.”
Watching the Donald show is fun, but look out for the real action off‑screen
America is living through a kind of Trumpian Genesis: seven days of high-speed political creation. In the beginning Trump created heaven (for his supporters) and hell (for the mainstream media).
Misjudge China, and Donald Dealmaker will never make America great again
President Donald J Trump’s favourite Twitter hashtag is #MAGA, which of course stands for “Make America great again”.
Here’s a true Trump nightmare for the liberals: that his policies work
Imagine if George Washington’s farewell address had been followed a day later — rather than 172 years later — by Richard Nixon’s first press conference as president-elect.
Sorry, I was wrong to fight Brexit to keep my friends in No 10 and No 11
The three words you are least likely to hear from an academic are “I was wrong”. My profession makes a virtue of consistency to the extent that always being wrong is considered superior to just occasionally changing your mind.
Trump’s Mad Dog is the sane warrior we need to make the world safer
“The press takes Trump literally, but not seriously. Voters take him seriously, but not literally.” This, by Salena Zito, was the smartest thing written about the 2016 election and deserves a place in every dictionary of quotations.
A catch-22 can prise the oligarch Trump out of the Oval Office
“The business of America is business,” said President Calvin Coolidge. “What is good for General Motors is good for the country and vice versa,” said Charles “Engine Charlie” Wilson, President Dwight Eisenhower’s defence secretary.
Carving out Trump’s new world order
A radical change in US foreign policy by the incoming president could lead to fresh alliances between the three superpowers and the ruthless dropping of old allegiances
Trump pitches, Clinton swings. But the size of the crowd is key to this game.
With Hillary Clinton’s lead in national polls erased by the return of her email server to the front pages, a ghastly question tortures my liberal friends — not to mention those of us on the other side who signed the “Never Trump” letter back in March: could Donald Trump become the 45th president of the United States?