The Dems Are Delighted. But a Coup Is Still a Coup.
After the bloodletting, Democrats are parading to their convention.
By Maureen Dowd
I focus mostly on presidential politics but I like to branch out and write about New York, Hollywood, Silicon Valley and occasionally, European politics. I love to cover the arc of women’s victories and setbacks in American life. I like to write with humor, but given all the impeachments, indictments, coups and villainy I have to cover, it’s hard to do it as often as I’d like.
I started at The Washington Star in 1973, working as a clerk on the overnight shift, taking dictation from reporters covering the Watergate trial in the days before cellphones and laptops. I became a city reporter in 1975. When the Star folded in 1981, I went to Time magazine for a couple years. Then the great Anna Quindlen hired me for the city desk of The New York Times in 1983. I transferred to Washington, my hometown, in 1986, and covered the Bush I and Clinton White Houses before becoming a columnist in 1995. I received the Pulitzer Prize in 1999 for distinguished commentary and have written several books, including “Bushworld,” which covered the presidency and personality of George W. Bush, and “Are Men Necessary? When Sexes Collide,” about gender politics. I have also written for GQ, Vanity Fair, Rolling Stone, The New Republic, Mademoiselle, Sports Illustrated and elsewhere.
I got an undergraduate degree from Catholic University and, in 2023, a Master’s Degree in English Literature from Columbia University.
You have to be Caesar’s wife at The Times. No one can achieve the purity of Bill Cunningham, the great Times street fashion photographer, who refused to even take a drink of water at parties he covered. But we can try. You can learn more about The Times’s ethics policy here.
X: @maureendowd
Instagram: @nytimesdowd
After the bloodletting, Democrats are parading to their convention.
By Maureen Dowd
In a rare in-depth interview, this billionaire man of mystery, the head of Palantir Technologies, talks about war, A.I. and America’s future.
By Maureen Dowd
It can be treacherous, measuring your worth in ego arithmetic.
By Maureen Dowd
Women should bat JD around like a ball of twine.
By Maureen Dowd
It’s sad that the president doesn’t see what’s inescapable.
By Maureen Dowd
After years on a self-mythologizing hero’s journey, the former president finally had a true story to tell.
By Maureen Dowd
It also reverberated in the Ambassador Hotel ballroom in 1968.
By Maureen Dowd
The president should be poked — out of the race.
By Maureen Dowd
After avenging herself on Disney and OpenAI, Ms. Johansson stars in a summer rom-com revolving around the race to the moon.
By Maureen Dowd
The White House desperately tries to take word salad off the menu.
By Maureen Dowd