Week in Review: Breaking Down the Fallout from Marie Yovanovitch’s Testimony

She did not move the needle on impeachment, but the main event has always been 2020.

November 17 2019

VISIT NATIONALREVIEW.COM

Breaking Down the Fallout from Marie Yovanovitch's Testimony

Andrew C. McCarthy

She did not move the needle on impeachment, but the main event has always been 2020. By that measure, Democrats had a pretty good day. Read More

ADVERTISEMENT


Top Stories

Marco Rubio's Half-Baked Political Philosophy

Kevin D. Williamson

Marco Rubio's "common-good capitalism" sounds a lot like Elizabeth Warren's "accountable capitalism."

The Manly Appeal of Ford v Ferrari

Kyle Smith

The film is a glorious throwback to the era when big stars did quality movies about actual people with real-life problems, but the scripts nevertheless adhered to basic Hollywood formulae such as "Have an exciting climax."

Pro-Life Investigators Found Guilty in Lawsuit After Filming Planned Parenthood Execs...

Zachary Evans

A San Fransisco district court on Friday found pro-life activists guilty in a lawsuit brought by Planned Parenthood after the activists surreptitiously filmed executives of the abortion group...

ADVERTISEMENT

Ten Reasons Impeachment Is Illegitimate

Victor Davis Hanson

The next Democratic president should be prepared, in his first term, for the real chance of facing the same, and apparently now institutionalized, tactics used against Trump.

Impeachment and the Broken Truce

Kevin D. Williamson

The cultural tug-o'-war over the presidency is the great American tribal competition in its most concentrated form.

Elise Stefanik Stood Out on Day One of the Impeachment Hearings

John McCormack

New York representative Elise Stefanik was clearly the strongest Republican questioner of the first day of public impeachment hearings.

The Houellebecqian Moment

Daniel Tenreiro

French provocateur Michel Houellebecq's latest novel, "Serotonin," comes as his longstanding concerns have begun to manifest in the liberal societies he so harshly criticizes.

Twitter Rolls Out Ban on Political Ads Covering Candidates, Elections and Legislation

Zachary Evans

The ban will go into effect on November 22 and prohibits any ads that mention specific candidates, elections, or legislation.

ADVERTISEMENT

JOIN NRPLUS

PIC_WFB-022718.jpg

All Our Content. Fewer Ads. Members-Only Privileges.

NRPLUS is everything you would associate with a digital magazine subscription, and a whole lot more ─ including up to 90% fewer on-site ads, access to our private Facebook group, full commenting privileges, and invites to our writer/editor conference calls.

SEE MY OPTIONS

Photo Essays

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

 
 
 
Learn more about RevenueStripe...
national review

Follow Us & Share

19 West 44th Street, Suite 1701, New York, NY, 10036, USA
Your Preferences | Unsubscribe | Privacy
View this e-mail in your browser.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

FOLLOW THE MONEY - Billionaire tied to Epstein scandal funneled large donations to Ramaswamy & Democrats

Breaking: Left-Wing Black History Children’s Book Distributed by Simon & Schuster Is Heavily Plagiarized

Pence goes full swamp on Donald Trump.