Sidebar
Un pódcast de The Washington Post
382 Episodo
-  Pardon me? And my family? And maybe my lawyer?Publicado: 4/12/2020
-  Trump’s lame-duck agenda: Lessons from history and warnings for coronavirusPublicado: 19/11/2020
-  Does Trump’s refusal to concede put national security at risk?Publicado: 13/11/2020
-  What do Trump’s legal threats actually accomplish?Publicado: 5/11/2020
-  Trump and the economy: The administration’s biggest victories also exacerbated our dividesPublicado: 29/10/2020
-  Trump and science: An erosion of our institutions, in public and behind the scenesPublicado: 28/10/2020
-  Trump and race: How the president’s rhetoric and policies divided usPublicado: 27/10/2020
-  How 2020 races across the country lay the groundwork for a president’s influencePublicado: 22/10/2020
-  The 2020 election is facing big challenges. Which ones matter most?Publicado: 15/10/2020
-  A week after we learned of Trump’s covid-19 diagnosis, why don’t we know more?Publicado: 8/10/2020
-  What happens if Trump refuses to accept a loss?Publicado: 2/10/2020
-  How the Supreme Court became the most trusted branch, and how electoral politics might undo thatPublicado: 24/9/2020
-  Is the federal government to blame for wildfires gone out of control?Publicado: 17/9/2020
-  The Justice Dept. intervenes on behalf of Trump in defamation case. What happens next?Publicado: 10/9/2020
-  Two different stories of American unrestPublicado: 3/9/2020
-  Trump suggested sending law enforcement to the polls. Can he do that?Publicado: 27/8/2020
-  Postal problems persist. (But your mail-in ballot is probably safe.)Publicado: 20/8/2020
-  How an extraordinary election season affects Trump’s reelection chancesPublicado: 13/8/2020
-  TikTok flip-flop: What’s the president’s power over foreign companies?Publicado: 6/8/2020
-  How America votes is inherently unpredictable. So why do polling?Publicado: 30/7/2020
The Washington Post’s Libby Casey, Rhonda Colvin and James Hohmann gather for a weekly in-depth conversation about politics and power. From presidential candidates to members of Congress to the judicial system, Sidebar dives deep on the topics and people at the forefront of the political conversation. The crew sits down each Thursday (with the occasional breaking news episode) to discuss what has happened that week, and what’s coming up the next week – with guest appearances from Washington Post reporters.
