2021 Really Starts Now: 6 Big Predictions for the Post-Trump Era

A second-half economic surge will be the lone bright spot in another long, dark year

Steve LeVine
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Photo illustration. Images: Getty Images; Shutterstock

Around the middle of each January, I publish six forecasts for the year to come. Why the middle of the month and not the start? My experience is that a December or first-of-the-year forecast risks residual influence of the old — you are still at least partly immersed in the year coming to an end and less likely to be fully alert to important clues of what is about to unfold. And this year, the real start of something new is Inauguration Day, not New Year’s Day.

This is the ninth year of these forecasts. I base them on 15 common sense guidelines — I call them “rules” — that reflect how people have tended to behave over time. (Here are the first 14, from the Muddle-Along Rule to the Conspiracy Rule, and the 15th.)

For the better part of the last quarter-century, more than 40% of Americans have nurtured a love affair with Fox News. Fox is not the most-watched network — legacy players CBS, NBC, and ABC still attract larger audiences, and CNN occasionally wins prime time. Nor is it the only cable show serving the right — small broadcasters like Newsmax and OAN have stolen some market share. But Fox is still by far the biggest player in conservative…

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