The first year of President Donald Trump’s second term has been marked by loyalty, stability and far less personnel drama around the Cabinet. That’s good.
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Debra J. Saunders

Debra J. Saunders was the Review-Journal's Washington columnist.
Gov. Gavin Newsom and former Vice President Kamala Harris could go toe to toe for the Democratic nomination for president in 2028.
The legacy media can’t get enough of Republicans who torch the president on their way out of favor. The Georgia congresswoman joins the GOP hall of shame.
California, which issued commercial driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants, many of whom couldn’t read English, revokes 17,000 credentials after Trump push.
Does the president doze? Probably. But regular media interviews and Cabinet meetings leave no doubt about his energy — or who’s running the country.
The Minnesota Somali community is accused of stealing more than $1 billion through bogus nonprofits. They’ve made themselves easy targets for Trump.
Transportation Secretary tells flying public: Ditch the sweat pants and slippers.
Just in time for the holidays, the American electorate is treated to a vague message of sedition and another presidential overreaction. Happy Thanksgiving!
Larry Summers is the new poster boy for Ivy League arrogance. For what other reason would he correspond with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein?
President Donald Trump’s pardon of cryptocurrency exchange titan Changpeng Zhao brings renewed attention to the power enshrined in the Constitution.
Most people have lost sight of the timeline surrounding the insidious, late sex offender, who took a plea deal in 2008 and killed himself in 2019.
It took moderate, bipartisan heroes to put down Democrats’ filibuster this week, get the Senate to 60 votes and reopen the federal government.
The Golden State governor takes on Trump and notches a big win, making him the Democratic front-runner for president in 2028.
Biden’s press secretary says he was betrayed. Her act of loyalty? She left the Democratic Party and became an independent, “Outside the Party Lines.”
House Republicans produce a report that reveals how far Biden’s inner circle went to hide his poor cognitive function — and try to get him re-elected anyway.
