
"The Washington Roundtable reflects on the first year since Donald Trump's second win, before a live audience at Harvard University's Institute of Politics, on November 20th. The panel considers how cracks in the MAGA firmament may shape what's next for the President and the Republican party. "American politics the last ten years have been dominated by this very singular disruptive figure of Donald Trump," the staff writer Susan B. Glasser says. "So what we define as the new abnormal, for a whole generation of Americans is, in fact, the new normal.""
"Listen and subscribe: Apple | Spotify | Google | Wherever You Listen to receive our twice-weekly News & Politics newsletter. This week's reading: Tune in to The Political Scene wherever you get your podcasts."
On November 20, a live event at Harvard University's Institute of Politics examined the first year since Donald Trump's second electoral victory. Participants analyzed how fractures within the MAGA movement may influence the President's standing and the broader Republican Party. Over the past decade, Donald Trump's disruptive influence has altered political norms, making behaviors once labeled abnormal feel routine to a generation of Americans. The normalization of these behaviors raises questions about institutional resilience, intra-party dynamics, and future electoral strategy. Audience members were encouraged to follow related coverage through twice-weekly News & Politics newsletters and by tuning to The Political Scene podcast.
Read at The New Yorker
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