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BY MICHAEL KRUSE Illustration by Zé Otavio with photos by AP, Getty, iStock “There has never been anyone like him in the United States Senate” Raphael Warnock won his seat as a campaigning preacher. To keep him, he will have to persuade voters that he is the rare senator who actually gets things done. BY MICHAEL KRUSE Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Liz Cheney wins GOP Manhood Contest Josh Hawley says real men value courage. Few members of Trump's party cross the bar. BY JOHN F. HARRIS Jose Luis Magana/AP Photo Ask the “coupologists”: what is January 6? Without a name for it, understanding why it happened is all the more difficult. BY JOSHUA ZEITZ Rebecca Gibian/AP Photo Nina Totenberg had a great friendship with RBG. His book about it is an embarrassment. His memoir shows all that is wonderful about friendship – and awful about insider cultivation. BY MICHAEL SCHAFFER Illustration from POLITICO by David Badders/Paramount, Getty Images, AP Photo 'Top Gun: Maverick' is America's cry for help The massive and unexpected success of the nostalgic blockbuster reflects a desperation to feel good – together, for once. BY DEREK ROBERTSON Photos by Jesse Dittmar for POLITICO 'It's my curse and my salvation': Trump's most famous columnist opens up For Maggie Haberman, owning Trump's pace has defined her career for better — and for worse. BY MICHAEL KRUSE What will become of the "blackest city in America"? In South Fulton, Georgia, two starkly different ideas about black political power are vying for control. The fate of the city hangs in the balance. BY MICHAEL KRUSE, BRITTANY GIBSON AND DELECE SMITH-BARROW Ted S. Warren/AP Photo 20 Ways The Supreme Court Just Changed America A range of thinkers on the post-Roe future of abortion in America – and how it will affect everything else. BY POLITICO MAGAZINE Photos by Chase Castor for POLITICO How Dobbs sparked a 'vasectomy revolution' The Supreme Court ruling has made men more interested in how they can prevent unwanted pregnancies. This is where "The Nutcracker" comes in. BY JESUS A. RODRÍGUEZ Photographs by Andy Manis for POLITICO 'Feels like you're being punished for something': Life in Wisconsin's most polarized and predictive county Residents of Sauk County, Wisconsin's leading indicator, aren't mad supporters, but Republicans and Democrats treat them that way. BY KATHY GILSINAN Illustration by Giulio Bonasera for POLITICO Critics call it theocratic and authoritarian. Young conservatives call it an exciting new legal theory. “Commons good constitutionalism” has emerged as a major contender to replace originalism as the dominant legal theory on the right. BY IAN WARD Illustrated by Rebekka Dunlap for POLITICO The hidden gas station battle to survive Electric vehicles are changing the way Americans fuel up. Will this mean the end of the gas station? BY DAVID FERRIS Drew Angerer/Getty Images What Republicans (and Democrats) Know About the White Working Class There is a significant social and economic divide that pushes the working-class whites that progressive elites miss the most — at their political peril. BY LISA R. PRUITT Photo illustration by Stefani Reynolds/AFP The Emptiness Inside Donald Trump's New Social Media Platform I joined Truth Social. Why do I feel like I'm the only one? BY RUBY CRAMER Photographs by Scott Goldsmith and Raymond McCrea Jones for POLITICO Magazine The Untold Story of the Afghan Women Who Ousted the Taliban Trained by the US military, a group of pioneering Afghan women have become a formidable force in their home country. They now live quietly scattered across the United States, trying to reconcile their past with their present. BY AMANDA RIPLEY Artwork by Sadie Lew The legacy Nancy Pelosi never wanted The revolutionary speaker's aversion to impeachment led her to short-circuit the oversight process. The price was two acquittals for Trump and a weakened Congress. BY RACHAEL BADE and KAROUN DEMIRJIAN Wikimedia Commons Where will this political violence lead? Look at the 1850s. In the mid-19th century, a pro-slavery minority—encouraged by legislators—used violence to stifle a growing anti-slavery majority. It wasn't long before the other side embraced force as a necessary response. BY JOSHUA ZEITZ Illustrated by John Broadley DC Power Players Pay Thousands of Dollars to Find Dates Inside the expensive, awkward, and sometimes even romantic world of DC's elite matchmaking. BY JESSICA M. GOLDSTEIN rt