Cal Thomas
Columns by Cal Thomas
The Biden cover-up: President must take cognitive test
Anyone hoping George Stephanopoulos' interview of President Biden would allay the growing fears of Democrats that the president is not mentally fit to serve another four years must be disappointed. Published July 8, 2024
Supreme Court protects all presidents
Put aside former President Donald Trump (an impossible task for some) and examine the Supreme Court's majority ruling that protects any president from litigation for decisions and actions he (or she, but for the sake of this column, I will use the male pronoun) has made while in office. Published July 3, 2024
Biden claims to know right from wrong
At a rally in Raleigh, North Carolina, following his universally criticized debate performance, President Biden attempted to draw a distinction between himself and former President Donald Trump: "I know how to tell the truth. I know right from wrong." Published July 1, 2024
Supreme Court to rule on transgender law
As if current Supreme Court cases were not controversial enough, the justices have accepted an appeal by the Biden administration seeking to "block state bans on gender-affirming care for minors." Notice that the media declare something "controversial" only when rulings go against the favored position of liberal elites. Published June 26, 2024
My questions for the candidates: A quest for honest answers, not sound bites
The debate between President Biden and former President Donald Trump on CNN on Thursday night ought to be more than the rehearsed answers and sound bites we've heard before. Polls show Americans are alarmed over what many feel is our country's unraveling in terms of the economy, uncontrolled immigration, the weakening of once-shared moral values, and what used to be known as cultural norms. Published June 24, 2024
Who’s a ‘threat to democracy’?
People of a certain age will recall a time when, after an election, the losing side would usually accept the results and initially give support to a new president during what was then called the "honeymoon" stage. Published June 19, 2024
From great orators to gobbledygook
Once, in America -- and in some other parts of the world -- we were gifted by great orators, men and women who could, through the power and content of their words, inspire, motivate and sometimes unify their nations. Published June 17, 2024
Events in European politics may foreshadow what’s ahead for U.S.
The 1970s are remembered for many things: the end of the Vietnam War, Richard Nixon's resignation from the presidency, American hostages held for 444 days by Iran, disco music (ugh). Published June 12, 2024
Joys of being part of the ‘never having to say you’re sorry’ mainstream media
The best jobs in Washington are the ones in which you never have to admit error and apologize. Published June 10, 2024
Biden’s border order: Too little, too late, too political
President Biden and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas have told the country they do not have the power to stop the flow of migrants entering the country unlawfully unless Congress passes new laws. Published June 5, 2024
Weaponization of legal system will come back to haunt Democrats
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg reached back to the 1930s to credit Thomas Dewey for "usher(ing) in the era of the modern, independent, professional prosecutor" in the conviction of Donald Trump. Published June 3, 2024
Placating a nuclear Iran, the world’s top promoter of terrorism
Despite what some Iranian leaders say to the gullible West, denying their intention to build nuclear weapons, Tehran's pursuit of delivering a nuclear warhead continues unimpeded. Published May 29, 2024
What the ‘new Nixon’ could teach Trump
In August 1968, Richard Nixon achieved what The New York Times called "the greatest reversal of fortune in American political history." Published May 28, 2024
No hope and no change in Biden’s disappointing Morehouse speech
President Biden's commencement address at Morehouse College in Atlanta, a historic school for Black men, was an imperfect end to an imperfect academic year. Published May 22, 2024
Better and more civil behavior needed in Congress
Last Friday in Washington, there was evidence of why only 16% of the public approve of the job Congress is doing, according to a Gallup poll. Published May 20, 2024
Warren Buffett is wrong on raising taxes
Many people have made money by following the advice of Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett. Published May 15, 2024
Trump undermines himself with crude language
If you are the parent of young children, are you OK with your children hearing former President Donald Trump's language and putdowns, like the ones at his rally last Saturday in Wildwood, New Jersey? Published May 13, 2024
Netanyahu ignores clueless Team Biden
What do you think President Franklin Roosevelt's response might have been if another nation had called on him to stop U.S. and Allied forces from taking Berlin and squashing the Nazi regime in 1945? Published May 8, 2024
Powerless church tells us what we want to hear rather than what we need to hear
There are many reasons for the modern church's loss of its prophetic voice, politics being just one of them. Published May 6, 2024
‘Never Again’ approaching again with antisemitic student protests
If history proves anything, it shows that if civil rights, human rights, equality and even the right to live are to be denied to a class of people, they must first be stripped of their inherent value as human beings. Published May 1, 2024