


Senate Republicans flex their independence
Trump doesn’t weigh in on a leadership contest, but real conflicts will soon come
MIKE JOHNSON, the speaker of the House of Representatives, became all but guaranteed to keep his job for another two years after receiving Donald Trump’s backing on November 13th. Yet Mr Trump conspicuously withheld an endorsement in another congressional leadership contest the same day, and Senate Republicans elected John Thune as their next majority leader. The South Dakotan now has the unenviable task of managing a busy legislative schedule while also trying to reconcile the demands of his own caucus, an unruly lower chamber and an emboldened and mercurial president.
Explore more
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Thune’s tune”

Back to the 1850s
Immigrant voters may have won America’s presidential election for the nativist candidate

Climate change and the next administration
There are obstacles to Donald Trump’s attempts to reverse progress

The promise Donald Trump is sure to keep
He wants more freedom to fire civil servants, but he should weigh the long-term consequences
Republicans finally win the coveted trifecta
Yet the party’s grip on power could be less reliable than it appears
The man picked as defence secretary wants to purge the Pentagon
Pete Hegseth, a Fox News host, takes aim at “woke shit”
What Trump’s picks suggest about how his presidency will go
Loyalty, competence and an appetite for disruption are among the traits he is filtering for