Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Latest Stories

Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Commentary: How to avoid AI-enhanced attempts to manipulate the election

The headlines this election cycle have been dominated by unprecedented events, among them former President Donald Trump’s criminal conviction, the attempt on his life, President Joe Biden’s disastrous debate performance and his replacement on the Democratic ticket by Vice President Kamala Harris. It’s no wonder other important political developments have been drowned out, including the steady ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Michelle Goldberg: Why Trump can afford to disrespect his anti-abortion voters

The Babylon Bee, which is like The Onion for conservative Christians, last month ran a despairing story about the presidential options anti-abortion voters have before them. “Pro-Lifers Excited to Choose Between Moderate Amount of Baby Murder and High Amount of Baby Murder,” said the headline. It was a dark joke, but it spoke to something real: a disquiet among some anti-abortion activists over Donald Trump’s attempts to distance himself from the abortion bans enabled by his Supreme Court appointees. Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, told my New York Times colleague Astead W. Herndon that declining evangelical enthusiasm for Trump could be a “grave danger” to his campaign.

Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Charles M. Blow: We have reached the scrounging-for-scandals phase of the campaign

Last Sunday, Dustin Grage, a columnist for the conservative website Townhall and a Republican strategist who describes himself as a “Minnesota GOP hype man,” posted on X a clip from a 2012 speech by Tim Walz to the American Legion. In the clip, Walz says: “When I was in Afghanistan, you know what our troops were worried about? They were worried about their family’s health care, and they were worried about their pensions.”
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Eugene Robinson: Kemp is wrong. This is the time to talk policy.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp stood before television cameras Wednesday night and said the cowardly words we always hear from Republican officials in such moments. Hours after two students and two teachers had been killed in a school shooting, allegedly committed by a 14-year-old boy with an AR-15-style semiautomatic weapon, Kemp declared: “Today is not the day for politics or policy.”
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Paul Krugman: Naked emperors and crypto campaign cash

Once upon a time there was an emperor who loved being fashion-forward. So he was receptive to some fast-talking tailors who promised to make him a suit out of new, high-technology fabric – a suit so comfortable that it would feel as if he were wearing nothing at all. “Fortune favors the brave,” they told him.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Jackie Calmes: Why Trump’s ‘leave it to the states’ abortion stance ties him in knots

Watching Donald Trump regularly twist himself into a pretzel to reach a politically safe position on abortion rights would be comical if the issue weren't so serious for the lives of countless women. In any case, his political gymnastics are doomed; Trump can't stick this landing. He is, after all, the former president whose three Supreme Court appointees made possible the decidedly unpopular ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Paul Krugman: The political rage of left-behind regions

There were local elections in several German states a few days ago, and the results – a strong showing by the Alliance for Germany, or AfD, a right-wing extremist party – were shocking but not surprising. Shocking because, given their history, Germans more than anyone else should fear the rise of anti-democratic right-wing forces. Not surprising because the AfD has been rising for a while, especially in the former East Germany, where the elections were held.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Charles Blow: An ode to Bill Clinton

My political awakening came when I was a 21-year-old intern at the New York Times. It was the summer of 1992, and I was assisting the Times’ political staff at the Democratic National Convention in Madison Square Garden, in Manhattan.