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James Ceaser is the Harry F. Byrd Professor of Politics at the University of Virginia, director of the Program for Constitutionalism and Democracy, and was a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is the author of several books on American politics and American political thought, including...
The Atlantic Politics & Policy Daily: Hoosier VP?
Auditions to be Donald Trump’s running mate are underway in Indiana.
The Incoherence Of Electoral College Opponents
The Facts and the Furious
Disagreements—and insults. Presidential politics, on the boil.
Where the Left Is Going
The long, strange trip of progressivism.
Shaken and Stirred
That tremor felt after Election Day was American democracy in action. Donald Trump’s allies and foes alike can make sure American principles stand firm.
Irrational Numbers
Sweet reason? Not in contemporary American politics.
Putin May Have Plans For Both Trump And Hillary
Conspiracy theories vs. Occam's razor.
What Obama Isn't Saying
The apolitical politics of progressivism. . . .
The Presidential Nomination Mess
It is a peculiarity of American government that after more than 200 years no fixed system exists for selecting the president of the United States...
What a Long Strange Race It's Been
If Americans selected their president by the party they preferred, no one doubts that a Democrat would be moving into the White House next January....
Race and Politics
Obama, Romney, and Equality
2012 In Perspective: Obama, Ryan, and the Youth Vote
When Paul Ryan mounts the podium on Wednesday to deliver his acceptance speech, he will give conservatives not just the ideological edge they have been longing for, but also an image of youth.
Trump And Sanders: Who's The Real 'Outsider'?
Outsiders have seldom been the real thing. Donald Trump has bragged about using government influence to get rich. Sanders’s policies would concentrate more power and resources in the nation’s capital.
The 2016 SOTU: A Delusional Denial Of Reality
Of all the descriptions of President Obama’s last State of the Union address, the most apt and succinct that I’ve seen comes from Dr. Everett Piper, President of Oklahoma Wesleyan University. He simply called it a “delusional denial.”
What Next For The Left?
A strange period has now passed into history. Captivated by a presidential campaign in 2008, Americans by the millions came to believe that a new leader would be able to produce more than a transformed society and an era of world peace. Politics could be extended beyond its ordinary boundaries and bring about a spiritual renewal.
Ralph Hancock: The Anti-Establishment Delusion
An “anti-establishment” mood is all the rage. Our media pundits cannot help classifying presidential candidates as either “anti-establishment” or in some “establishment lane.” But when candidates with views and even temperaments as diverse as Sanders, Trump and Cruz are lumped together under the rubric “establishment,” we should suspect there is some major confusion afoot.
A New Era In Conservative Politics: The Tea Party's Lasting Influence
Less a new, independent movement than a reinvigoration of conservatism, the Tea Party has transformed American politics. It has reestablished the centrality of the U.S. Constitution in public discourse, made the federal debt a national-level question, and resurrected the necessity of holding elected officials accountable to their constituencies.
Anger Management
Anger is all the rage these days in American politics. A recent New York Times column bore the headline “The Year of the Angry Voter," while an earlier Washington Post story read "It's Not Just Trump: Voter Anger Fuels Outsider Candidates."
Behind The Rise Of Trump, Long-Standing Grievances Among Left-Out Voters
At the core of Donald Trump’s political success this year are the grievances of a sizable and now vocal block of disaffected voters, many of them white and working-class, and a Republican Party that has sought and benefited from their support while giving them almost nothing tangible in return.

