Our View: People are already suspicious about vaccines. Political pressure on the Food and Drug Administration will further undermine trust.
Author: The Editorial Board, USA TODAY
In Ginsburg death, nation loses a titan of the law, trailblazer for women’s rights
Our View: McConnell’s bid to ram through a successor smacks of cynicism and hypocrisy.
Donald Trump sells himself at RNC: Reelect me to fix the problems I created
Our View: Donald Trump promised in 2016 to deliver America from evils. Instead, he has delivered evils to America.
Joe Biden’s VP choice of Kamala Harris signals return to American values and competence
Our View: Kamala Harris is qualified to handle the top job. Plus she’s a fundraising powerhouse who could energize women and Black voters for Joe Biden
Outside COVID-19 hot spots, try to reopen schools based on local data and safety resources
Ignore Donald Trump threatening to cut off funding for school districts. Reopening classes amid coronavirus should not be one size fits all: Our view
Under Donald Trump, is the Republican Party better off than it was four years ago? No.
Republican silence to Trump commuting Roger Stone’s sentence is just the latest way he has dumped the GOP on the wrong side of history: Our view
Make Juneteenth a national holiday for the American dream of liberty and justice for all
Trump delaying rally makes it seem Juneteenth is someone else’s celebration. But all Americans should mark major milestone against slavery: Our view
Change Confederate military base names to honor those who fought for America
Donald Trump opposes renaming bases honoring Confederate generals, but the United States shouldn’t glorify those who took up arms against it: Our view
In a pandemic, the digital divide separates too many Americans from relief
Tens of millions of Americans lack broadband access. During normal times, that’s a problem. In a pandemic, it’s a crisis: Our view
Trump says he supports the troops. His record suggests otherwise.
The president portrays himself as a champion of troops. But next month’s West Point graduation, in the midst of a pandemic, says otherwise: Our view