Impeachment, Explained
Un pódcast de Vox
20 Episodo
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57-43
Publicado: 17/2/2021 -
Capitol punishment
Publicado: 9/2/2021 -
A step past impeachment
Publicado: 12/1/2021 -
Weeds 2020: The Bernie electability debate
Publicado: 29/2/2020 -
Jill Lepore on what I get wrong
Publicado: 20/2/2020 -
The impeachment trial convicted American politics
Publicado: 1/2/2020 -
The McConnell effect
Publicado: 25/1/2020 -
"Constitutional decay" in the US Senate
Publicado: 18/1/2020 -
Impeachment and Iran
Publicado: 11/1/2020 -
Impeachment in, and beyond, the Beltway
Publicado: 21/12/2019 -
Mr. Feldman goes to Washington
Publicado: 14/12/2019 -
How Andrew Johnson’s impeachment created the template for Trump’s
Publicado: 7/12/2019 -
Was Rudy Giuliani always like this?
Publicado: 30/11/2019 -
What’s wrong with the Republican Party?
Publicado: 23/11/2019 -
With obstruction of justice for all
Publicado: 16/11/2019 -
The biggest difference between Trump and Nixon is Fox News
Publicado: 9/11/2019 -
A no-BS guide to how the House impeachment process really works
Publicado: 2/11/2019 -
The Ukraine story is a Russia story
Publicado: 26/10/2019 -
The four words that will decide impeachment
Publicado: 19/10/2019 -
We are living through history
Publicado: 12/10/2019
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We are living through history, but keeping up with the unending stream of revelations, statements, tweets, and disputes is already difficult enough. If we’re going to understand this inquiry–and this presidency–we need to slow down the news cycle long enough to separate the signal from the noise. Every Saturday, Ezra Klein will do just that – through deep conversations with Vox reporters and leading policy voices about what’s going on, why it matters, and where it leaves us now.
