


Donald Trump is attacking what made American universities great
More than Middle East Studies is in trouble
The conservative counter-revolution began with a secret memo, at least as the tale is often told on America’s political left, with the mix of fear and envy characteristic of the conspiracy-minded. In the summer of 1971 Lewis Powell was an eminent corporate lawyer, soon to be nominated and confirmed for the Supreme Court, when he drafted a confidential proposal for the US Chamber of Commerce. Powell laid out a costly, co-ordinated, years-long programme to counter the left’s influence in the media, the courts, the boardroom and, above all, universities. “There is reason to believe that the campus is the single most dynamic source” of an intensifying assault on free enterprise, he warned.
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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Big man on campus”

How Donald Trump is shaping other countries’ politics
He is boosting the centre and centre-left and delighting the hard right

Is it ever right to pay disabled workers pennies per hour?
It is legal to do so in most American states

How (and why) J.D. Vance does it
The vice-presidency is a famously terrible job and Donald Trump a famously bad boss. And yet
The Trump train slows
Results from Florida and Wisconsin suggest a familiar pattern in American politics
Will Elon Musk’s cash splash pay off in Wisconsin?
A judicial race has become a referendum on the billionaire’s behaviour
DOGE comes for the data wonks
America may soon be unable to measure itself properly