Former President Donald Trump defeated Vice President Kamala Harris to become the 47th president of the United States, ...
Conservative political commentators Bill Kristol ’73 and Ross G. Douthat ’02 said Vice President Kamala Harris failed to articulate a cohesive argument against Donald Trump during a post-election ...
Harvard President Alan M. Garber ’76 always knew it would be difficult for him to mend the University’s relationship with ...
Two professors argued that Black and Latino voters in the 2024 presidential election shifted rightward because of their ...
Harvard’s Phi Beta Kappa chapter will not require students to submit applications for its Junior 24 and Senior 48 classes ...
Vitamin D supplementation does not reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease, researchers reported in a September paper. The ...
I genuinely believed that Hispanics would turn out for Harris. I thought moral clarity would guide us to the humane choice. I was wrong.
The Harvard schedule follows a predictable rhythm. Most classes meet twice weekly — either Monday-Wednesday or Tuesday-Thursday — plus a discussion section. Consequently, with minimal finagling, most ...
The outpouring of enthusiasm and effort we witnessed over the last three months has been remarkable. That energy cannot end here.
Today, Harvard’s Institute of Politics has a choice to make too. Nonpartisanship — a founding principle of the IOP — is no longer a tenable position in today’s political environment. Donald Trump’s ...
Medicare Advantage plans may receive as much as $1.3 billion in excess funding for veterans who receive nearly no care through Medicare, researchers reported in a Monday study.
The IOP’s choice is clear: It is time to choose a commitment to democracy over a commitment to nonpartisanship.