Our Writers on a Second Trump Presidency

The DailyYou’re reading The New Yorker’s daily newsletter, a guide to our top stories, featuring exclusive insights from our writers and editors. Sign up to receive it in your in-box.In today’s newsletter, reflections on Donald Trump’s reëlection, and then:The Democratic Party gets a wake-up callA new film that transcends the holiday-movie genreCelebrating Charles Ives’s hundred-and-fiftieth birthdayDonald Trump, ReprisedWhat his return to the Presidency reveals about America.It became clear quite quickly on Tuesday night that the American electorate had shifted since 2020. There had been reason to imagine that Donald Trump’s Presidency would be just a hard-to-remove stain on the fabric of American history and politics—something of the past. But “America has now twice elected him as its President,” Susan B. Glasser wrote on Wednesday morning, and “it is a disastrous revelation about what the United States really is, as opposed to the country that so many hoped that it could be.” Over the past few days, The New Yorker has been collecting reflections from reporters, novelists, historians, and others about what the election results mean for the nation and the world. Together these dispatches create a deeply resonant portrait, in some ways familiar and in others frighteningly new, of a country on the edge. This is an ongoing series, with more to come. Explore the hub »The latest dispatches:•  Jia Tolentino on America’s gender war•  Kelefa Sanneh on Trump and race•  Jelani Cobb on the missing guardrails•  George Saunders on the deeper rot•  Lorrie Moore on Trump’s continued appeal•  Adam Gopnik on common ground•  Timothy Snyder on fascism•  Jane Mayer on the Supreme CourtJay Caspian KangIllustration by Till LauerThe Reckoning of the Democratic Party“Someone needs to catch some blame here, but, when you lose this big, it’s hard to find the obvious culprit,” Jay Caspian Kang writes in his latest column. Donald Trump’s win did not come out of nowhere, and the Democrats seem to have a lot of work ahead of them. Kang advises that a winning coalition will only arise when the Party moves beyond scorn and disbelief to become genuinely curious and more focussed on non-white, non-college-educated voters. Read the column »More Top Stories“Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point” Transcends the Holiday-Movie GenreCharles Ives, Connoisseur of ChaosThe Amazing, Disappearing Johnny CarsonDaily CartoonCartoon by Adam Douglas ThompsonCopy link to cartoonCopy link to cartoonLink copiedShopShopMore Fun & GamesPlay today’s bite-size puzzle. A clue: Mushroom’s reproductive cell. Five letters.Shouts & Murmurs: Post-Election FacesP.S. It’s a good time to start embracing hygge, a Danish term that has no direct translation in English but essentially means to embody a sense of coziness and conviviality, especially in the winter months. “It’s wholesome and nourishing,” Anna Altman writes, “like porridge.”

Nov 8, 2024 - 20:32
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Our Writers on a Second Trump Presidency

In today’s newsletter, reflections on Donald Trump’s reëlection, and then:

Image may contain Lighting Fashion Accessories Formal Wear Tie Adult Person Clothing Footwear Shoe and Premiere

Donald Trump, Reprised

What his return to the Presidency reveals about America.

It became clear quite quickly on Tuesday night that the American electorate had shifted since 2020. There had been reason to imagine that Donald Trump’s Presidency would be just a hard-to-remove stain on the fabric of American history and politics—something of the past. But “America has now twice elected him as its President,” Susan B. Glasser wrote on Wednesday morning, and “it is a disastrous revelation about what the United States really is, as opposed to the country that so many hoped that it could be.” Over the past few days, The New Yorker has been collecting reflections from reporters, novelists, historians, and others about what the election results mean for the nation and the world. Together these dispatches create a deeply resonant portrait, in some ways familiar and in others frighteningly new, of a country on the edge. This is an ongoing series, with more to come. Explore the hub »

The latest dispatches:

•  Jia Tolentino on America’s gender war
•  Kelefa Sanneh on Trump and race
•  Jelani Cobb on the missing guardrails
•  George Saunders on the deeper rot
•  Lorrie Moore on Trump’s continued appeal
•  Adam Gopnik on common ground
•  Timothy Snyder on fascism
•  Jane Mayer on the Supreme Court


Jay Caspian Kang

Illustration of a hardhat with I voted sticker.
Illustration by Till Lauer

The Reckoning of the Democratic Party

“Someone needs to catch some blame here, but, when you lose this big, it’s hard to find the obvious culprit,” Jay Caspian Kang writes in his latest column. Donald Trump’s win did not come out of nowhere, and the Democrats seem to have a lot of work ahead of them. Kang advises that a winning coalition will only arise when the Party moves beyond scorn and disbelief to become genuinely curious and more focussed on non-white, non-college-educated voters. Read the column »

More Top Stories

Daily Cartoon

In a blackandwhite drawing a woman rummaging through a closet notices in a box labelled “Winter” a fuchsia pussy hat.
Cartoon by Adam Douglas Thompson
More Fun & Games

P.S. It’s a good time to start embracing hygge, a Danish term that has no direct translation in English but essentially means to embody a sense of coziness and conviviality, especially in the winter months. “It’s wholesome and nourishing,” Anna Altman writes, “like porridge.”

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