New York Magazine on MSNOpinion

2025’s Biggest Political Losers

It was a rough year for a lot of people in Washington. But few had as bad a 2025 as Elise Stefanik and Andrew Cuomo.
It's a bipartisan problem in a country beset by polarization: Since the start of 2025, political violence has killed, injured or threatened conservative and liberal political figures alike. This month ...
A significant portion of young Americans believe there are cases when political violence is acceptable, according to a troubling survey released Monday. More than one-third of Americans under the age ...
FIRST ON FOX: The House Freedom Caucus is holding an event this week aimed at praying for an end to political violence as well as those affected by the ongoing government shutdown. The conservative ...
With the year winding down, 2025 has left many top Democratic figures wishing things had turned out differently — or maybe that the public had put its focus elsewhere. Here are the top political ...
I have a picture of Jesse Jackson on the wall of my office. Actually, it’s a mug shot. It was taken in 1999. Jackson, then in his 50s, had just been arrested while protesting the expulsion of Black ...
More local officials than ever say in a new survey that political polarization is having a negative impact nationally, with those in larger communities seeing greater local effects — findings that ...
House Republicans used a little-invoked statutory power to cancel nearly $645 million in state department project funding—a sweeping move that stunned Democrats and raised questions about long-term ...
Jennifer Lawrence is rethinking her approach to discussing her political views. While speaking on The New York Times' "The Interview" podcast, the "Die My Love" star, who has been a vocal critic of ...
Jennifer Lawrence says celebrities make no difference on how people vote. Is that true? The Oscar-winning "Hunger Games" star, 35, recently told The New York Times' "The Interview" podcast she has ...
Political thrillers have been a staple of popular culture since the 1960s, when the Cold War threw conspiracy theory-loving writers into overdrive, and television and film are no exception. This year, ...