Jackie Calmes is an opinion columnist for the Los Angeles Times in Washington, D.C. Before joining The Times in 2017 as White House editor, she worked at the New York Times and Wall Street Journal, covering the White House, Congress and national politics. She served as the chief political correspondent and chief economic correspondent at each paper. In 2004, she received the Gerald R. Ford Journalism Prize for Reporting on the Presidency. Calmes began her career in Texas covering state politics and moved to Washington in 1984 to work for Congressional Quarterly. She was a fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy and at the University of Chicago Institute of Politics. She is the author of “Dissent: The Radicalization of the Republican Party and Its Capture of the Court.”
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Latest From This Author
President Biden and the Democratic Party are showing signs they’ll match Republicans’ hard-edged tactics in the 2024 campaign.
March 13, 2024
We’ve learned the hard way: It matters whether Donald Trump or President Biden is picking federal judges.
March 10, 2024
President Biden has to make us want to stick with ol’ Joe when he delivers his annual message to Congress and the nation on Thursday.
March 6, 2024
Getting a courtroom verdict on Trump’s Jan. 6 actions before the election day seems impossible. Which makes verdict at the ballot box crucial.
March 3, 2024
It’s demoralizing when even the Republican politicians who believe Trump isn’t fit to be president capitulate anyway.
Feb. 29, 2024
Fifteen stingy GOP-led states are refusing federal money that would help feed hungry children this summer.
Feb. 26, 2024
What the former president reveals on the stump should wipe away any doubt about which candidate is unhinged.
Feb. 22, 2024
‘History is watching,’ says President Biden, and it is. Not that the MAGA ‘America first’ disciples in Congress care.
Feb. 19, 2024
The media’s ‘but his age’ meme is its way of evening the score with its criticisms of Donald Trump. Would Biden’s approval ratings look better without the bothsides-ism?
Feb. 14, 2024
President Biden can’t get any younger. But he can show and Democrats can tell voters that he’s competent.
Feb. 10, 2024