Jonah Goldberg is editor in chief of the Dispatch and has been a Los Angeles Times Opinion columnist since 2005. He holds the Asness Chair in Applied Liberty at the American Enterprise Institute. He was previously senior editor at National Review, where he had worked for two decades. He is a weekly columnist for The Times, and a CNN contributor. Goldberg appears regularly on NPR’s “Morning Edition” and is the author of three New York Times bestsellers, the most recent of which is “Suicide of the West.” He lives in Washington, D.C.
Latest From This Author
Polls show only incremental movement in his campaign against President Biden. But that could be enough to change a close race that depends on swing voters.
June 4, 2024
Pulled between political catastrophe and salvation, voters in high numbers are objectively wrong. It’s a huge problem for Biden.
May 28, 2024
The president and his rival circumvented the debate commission amid much fanfare. But the contests have been counterproductive spectacles since Nixon-Kennedy.
May 21, 2024
The president has tried to leverage abortion rights, tout progress on the economy and adjust his Israel policy. What he can’t change are the “vibes.”
May 14, 2024
Democrats’ far-left excesses are collapsing under their own weight. Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump and other culture warriors had little to do with it.
May 7, 2024
It’s a mistake to regard youth demonstrations such as those over Israel’s war in Gaza through a lens of ‘60s nostalgia. Crowds can be a force for ill as well as good.
April 30, 2024
In a significant blow to the Marjorie Taylor Greene fringe, Speaker Mike Johnson got aid to Ukraine and Israel through the House and might yet keep his job.
April 23, 2024
Biden urged Benjamin Netanyahu to refrain from retaliation against Iran even though its attack appeared to defy the president’s own warning after Oct. 7.
April 16, 2024
Florida Sen. Marco Rubio recently advocated for industrial policy, the sort of state intervention in the economy that was long anathema to conservatives.
April 9, 2024
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his running mate, Nicole Shanahan, could make voters regret wishing for an option other than the Republican and Democratic candidates.
April 2, 2024