


On its tenth birthday, gay marriage in America is under attack
Republican support for same-sex marriage is dropping fast
In 2004 the first legal same-sex marriage in America took place in city hall in Cambridge, Massachusetts. President George W. Bush condemned the development, as did Democratic politicians. At the time most Americans agreed—polls showed nearly twice as many opposed gay marriage as supported it. But public support for gay marriage swelled in the years to come. And what began as a judicial decision championed by Birkenstock-wearing liberals in one of America’s most progressive states became the law of the land ten years ago, on June 26th 2015, when the Supreme Court ruled in Obergefell v Hodges that gay couples have a constitutional right to marry.
Explore more

Oklahoma City has been reborn, 30 years after the bombing
Basketball is only the beginning

Has Donald Trump solved Iran from the air?
Peace in his time

The fallout from Trump’s Iran strikes is political, too
Will the biggest foreign-policy gamble of his presidency pay off?
Why America’s hospitals don’t want their taxes cut
Congress is taking aim at a gimmick vital to rural health providers
Even for $10bn, the Los Angeles Lakers may look like a bargain
A seeming vanity investment is in fact a market-beating asset class
The meaning of Zohran Mamdani’s win in New York
America’s biggest city takes a strange turn