On the latest episode of the Potomac Watch podcast, Paul Gigot says Iran thinks it got the better deal with the U.S., and might be able to keep their regime intact. on.wsj.com/3SQRk2U
Justice Department IG Michael Horowitz compiled a factually damning report that even a thickheaded and biased press will have to take account of, writes @HolmanJenkinson.wsj.com/38yLoA4
Joe Biden has an obligation to answer questions about his son’s influence-peddling and his own financial dealings—notably regarding China, writes The Editorial Board
Something seems to be rotten at the U.S. Customs and Border Protection office in Orlando where a fake U.S. entry document for an adviser to former Brazilian President Bolsonaro has been posted on its website twice since 2024, writes @MaryAnastasiaOG
Iranians continue to protest in the streets against their rulers in Tehran, often at enormous personal cost. One brave example is our contributor Hossein Ronaghi and his family.
The media question of the day is why members of the press corps aren’t deciding on their own to reject the source who seems to have been misleading them for years, writes @FreemanWSJ.
If Adam Schiff were confident in his legal position, he’d want to put the case to a judge. Yet he seems desperate not to, writes @DavidRivkin and Lee A. Casey on.wsj.com/3783Wqi
A Brazilian court has been using false Customs records to detain Filipe Martins, an ally of former President Jair Bolsonaro, as a flight risk since March 2024.
The debate clash showed that Mike Pence is much more than merely a loyal deputy, and that Kamala Harris’s views are much further to the left than Democrats want Americans to know, writes The Editorial Board