| Our Columnists New Democratic Polls Offer Encouragement to Biden, Warren, and Sanders Polls conducted following the third Democratic debate show that Biden and Sanders have retained their support. But Warren’s campaign may have the most room to grow. By John Cassidy | | | The Political Scene The Fight for the Latino Vote in Florida Immigration, taxes, and health care matter, but a foreign-policy issue has taken center stage. By Jonathan Blitzer | The Political Scene La pelea por el voto latino en Florida La inmigración, los impuestos y la atención médica importan, pero un tema de política exterior ha acaparado el debate. By Jonathan Blitzer | | | Daily Comment The Right Wing’s War on the L.G.B.T.Q. Community The use of religious freedom as a tool to enable discrimination has become a bedrock principle of the modern conservative movement. By Jeffrey Toobin | Daily Comment Israel Has Voted—and Netanyahu’s Future Is in Doubt But it may prove easier to get the Prime Minister out of office than to get another leader in. By Bernard Avishai | | | PAID POST “This way of treating women ends now,” she said. From the New York Times reporters who broke the news of Harvey Weinstein’s sexual harassment and abuse comes the thrilling, untold story of their investigation and its consequences for the #MeToo movement. | | | | Letter from the U.K. The Brexit Agonies of David Cameron The former Prime Minister’s new memoir combines humanizing details about his personal life with a less sympathetic account of his role in recent British history. By Rebecca Mead | Culture Desk The Origins of New York’s Floating-Billboard Problem The advertising scheme behind a recently banned billboard boat takes a page from Fred Trump’s playbook. By Thomas J. Campanella | | | | Page-Turner The 2019 National Book Awards Longlist: Nonfiction This year’s contenders write about New Orleans, Northern Ireland, the southern border, and more. History—and how it inflects the present—is the presiding theme. By The New Yorker | The Front Row The Wan Faithfulness of “The Goldfinch” Rather than the book’s free play of memory, the film conveys the mechanical tone of a cinematic Pez dispenser proffering sweetened, uniform lozenges of incident. By Richard Brody | | | | Daily Shouts A Post-Apocalypse Modern Love If the bar had been low when resources were plentiful, it was subterranean after the sea levels rose. By Ayo Edebiri and Olivia Craighead | Daily Cartoon Thursday, September 19th By Teresa Burns Parkhurst | | | | | | |
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