President Obama enjoys a round on the golf course, Mitt Romney spends some quality time on Fox News and Donald Trump refuses to go away. Here is our afternoon round-up of cartoons to get you caught up on what's happening in the news...
President Obama enjoys a round on the golf course, Mitt Romney spends some quality time on Fox News and Donald Trump refuses to go away. Here is our afternoon round-up of cartoons to get you caught up on what's happening in the news...
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is proposing a ban on the sale of large sodas and other sugary drinks in the city’s restaurants, delis and movie theaters in the hopes of combatting obesity. Aside from coffee, soda is the life blood of many cartoonists, so when politicians threaten to limit our intake, naturally we become leery.
Here are some recent cartoons about this latest onslaught against our favorite sugary drinks. What do you think? Comment below or drop us a note on our Facebook page.

Cam Cardow / Ottawa Citizen
In an effort to cut costs, some newspapers in the U.S. and Canada have announced they are shedding print editions and moving to digital delivery of news. The Ottawa Citizen, owned by Postmedia Network Inc., will print its last Sunday paper on July 15, and plans on eliminating 20 newsroom jobs.
I asked Cam Cardow, the brilliant Canadian cartoonist and longtime Citizen contributor (who I syndicate thru CagleCartoons.com), what he thought of the grim announcement:
I'm a little shell-shocked byt this. I'm looking at the huge losses Postmedia is reporting and understand that those losses will lead to even more cuts, meaning jobs. Apparently the Citizen is expecting more announcements this summer and I think everyone has to be realistic about where the industry is ended and what this means for their employment status. It is a truly sad outcome for those of us of grew up with newspapers, who love the feel of the paper and the smell of the ink. You always hope for the best, but at some point you have to accept that just because the band is playing on doesn't mean the plunge into the cold, black icy abyss will be put off any longer.
That steady noise you hear growing in the background are kids across the country celebrating that another year of school has come and gone.
We know parents have their local summer camp on speed dial, but before you start pulling our hair out, check out our funny School's Out cartoon slideshow.
The blood and carnage continues in Syria. UN observers have reportedly discovered 13 bodies bound and shot in eastern Syria, days after a massacre of 108 civilians, nearly half of them children, ignited a global outcry.
Cartoonists have been drawing hard-hitting cartoons about President Bashar al-Assad and his brutal regime for years. Check out their latest in our Sadness in Syria cartoon slideshow.
Last night, Mitt Romney finally sealed up the Republican nomination, breaching the 1,144-delegate plateau with his victory in the Texas primary. It feels like this race has been going on forever, so I thought I’d share five terrific Mitt Romney cartoons from our archive. It’s only going to get more entertaining for cartoonists from here…
Mitt Romney might be playing with fire by keeping Donald Trump around. Romney will appear with the birther and reality television star tonight at a fundraiser in Las Vegas.
Here are some funny cartoons about the unlikely pairing of Romney and The Donald. What do you think of the pair? Comment below or drop us a note on our Facebook page!
According to the National Employment Law Project, next month 70,000 people will lose unemployment benefits earlier than they presumed, bringing the number of people cut off prematurely this year to close to half a million. And that's not even counting people who simply exhausted the weeks of benefits they were entitled to.
Here are five hard-hitting cartoons about the extended unemployment problem the U.S. faces. Anyone have a solution?

Bob Englehart / Hartford Courant
Satirist Will Durst weighs in on Memorial Day and the unofficial start of Summer...
Disregard the almanac. And the calendar. Forget whatever the meteorologist or the astrology charts or your next-door neighbor with the hair growing out of a mole shaped like the state of Delaware on his nose told you. The true wormhole opening to summer is not the upcoming solstice on Wednesday, June 20th; it is, has been, and forever shall be the last Monday of May -- Memorial Day.
Memorial Day: when the world alters unalterably for every kid and teacher and parent and water-park operator across the land. By now, the cages have either sprung open or the locks are being picked, and the imprinted DNA of every true-blooded American tingles in anticipation of the ten-to-twelve weeks of school-free adventures looming ahead like a sun-kissed valley below a fog-enshrouded summit. Even those of us who don't get to stop and romp in the valley are able to recall extended days when we did, and can't help but grin wistfully.

Martin Sutovec / Slovakia, PoliticalCartoons.com
Officially, the last Monday of May was carved out as a peaceful respite to lay a wreath at the tomb of all the young men and women who sacrificed their lives for the security of our nation, not to mention the multitude of valiant drivers tragically lost in Midwestern automobile races.
Unofficially, it's the time for the whole of America to stop in the headlong momentum of the year to lean on a freshly painted picnic table and catch our collective breath.
Summer? Seriously? Already? How the hell did that happen? Wasn't it just the other day we were taking down our Xmas cards? Of course some of us still have our Xmas cards up. And exactly what is wrong with that?
Most importantly, Memorial Day marks the beginning of the flesh-charring season. Our own, at the beach, eating al fresco for the first time all year and on the freshly scrubbed grill -- those many brave, sluggish mammals who gave their lives in order for us to raise our cholesterol levels to heights where Sherpas fear to tread. Thank the pig.

Dave Granlund / PoliticalCartoons.com
Now is the time for fireworks and lemonade and tires swinging on ropes over rivers and roasted marshmallows and ice cream on sticks that melt down your hand all the way to the elbow. And golf and hiking and roasted corn and suntan lotion and thunderstorms and baseball broadcasts on an AM radio and spending a week in the middle of August jammed in the back of a station wagon with no air conditioning, an 18-year-old incontinent basset hound and a leaking Coleman cooler.
Some people even claim to find camping relaxing. Good for you. To me, the outdoors is where the car is. Roughing it means cable TV without Turner Classic Movies. You say Wilderness: I think spotty cell phone coverage.
Our season of frenzied leisure is too shortly destined to end on Labor Day, so hurry on out there and have one terrific summer full of long, languid days and soft, warm, breezy nights. Go frolic and cavort and gambol and caper in a madcap series of wacky, zany antics that you remember fondly. Always. And try to keep the sand off your hot dog. If you know what I mean. Gentlemen: Start your Webers.
Will Durst is a political comedian and columnist for Cagle Cartoons Inc. Read more of Durst's columns here.
Did you know Memorial Day started off as Decoration Day, which originated after the Civil War to commemorate fallen Union soldiers?
Today, we care more about burgers than we do about our fallen soldiers. Editors often want funny political cartoons, so it's tough when our cartoonists get serious about issues like this they find important. Here are five great cartoons that are right on the mark about what's really important on Memorial Day...
Egypt's first free presidential election could be heading for a contest between an Islamist candidate and a former air force chief who was a leading member of ousted leader Hosni Mubarak's last government.
We have lots of cartoonists from across the globe weighing in on this historic election. Check out their best cartoons in our new Egyptian Elections cartoon slideshow.
Every Friday, we collect the best political cartoons of the week and stuff them into one big, glorious slideshow.
So just relax and catch up on a week’s worth of news with our Best Cartoons of the Week slideshow.
With SpaceX's Dragon capsule making final preparations to become the first private spacecraft to dock with the International Space Station, I thought I'd share what our cartoonists think about the future of commercial space flight...




Yesterday, columnist Tina Dupuy (who I syndicate to newspapers and Web sites nationwide) wrote about the need for gun control in America, noting that the NRA was for gun control over its first hundred years and only recently started to mention the Second Amendment as their cause.
There’s no cartoonist who cares about the issue of gun control more than Bill Day. Here are some of Day’s best cartoons about guns in America.





What do you think – do we need more gun control laws, or less? Comment below or weigh in on our Facebook page!
The Secret Service prostitution scandal was back in the news today, as Senators grilled Secret Service chief Mark Sullivan about misconduct during the president's trip to Colombia.
Here are some funny cartoons...
Related: My Secret Service cartoons
Five Great Secret Service Cartoons
I'm having more and more fun drawing Mitt Romney. The grey temples, the perfect hair. Normally, good looking politicians are the worst to draw, and Romney looks like he belongs on "Mad Men", but I have to admit he's growing on me.
Here's Romney at the tattoo parlour...

Obama makes sure that Romney gives us nightmares...

Romney and Obama have much the same style...

The National Institute of Health says that coffee drinkers may live longer. So sit back, relax, enjoy that hot cup of coffee and enjoy this cartoon slideshow.
Political cartoonists often use established visual metaphors in order to help get their opinion across in their work. Greek urns have managed to survive thousands of years, so what better metaphor to use in order to describe the fiscal calamity Greece currently faces?
Related: My Big, Fat Greek Collapse Cartoons
For the first time in U.S. history, more than half of the babies born in the country are nonwhite. The data also shows that almost half of all young children are from minority groups, which means the next generation of Americans will be far more diverse than today.
Cam Cardow of the Ottawa Citizen sees a trend developing among protesters…

While John Cole of the Scranton Times-Tribune sees a new “border war” developing…

Dave Granlund sees whites as just the latest mammal population to dwindle…

Meanwhile, according to David Fitzsimmons of the Arizona Daily Star, an Arizona legislator wants a state holiday for white people…

And Pat Bagley of the Salt Lake Tribune shows who the real minority is in the U.S. these days…

Mitt Romney gets a bit tongue-tied answering questions, Facebook continues to make waves on Wall Street and immigrants debate crossing the border. Here is our afternoon round-up of cartoons to get you caught up on what's happening in the news...
Will Greece remain in the Euro?
It’s a debate that’s flummoxing all of Europe at the moment. Leaders of the G8 industrialized nations agreed over the weekend that Greece should remain a member of the European Union, yet many, like Hungary’s finance minister, say openly that the only way forward is for Greece to leave the Euro.
Here’s my new cartoon about the craziness in Greece, featuring a Greek statue throwing a Euro coin at German Chancellor Angela Merkel…

Whenever anyone in the U.S. thinks of Greece, century-old temples and marble statues are often the first things that come to mind. Using these visual images makes it easier to express the dire situation Greece faces without getting into the weeds of numbers and details…

Of course, all the statues have to be armless. It’s like drawing a cheating politician in his underwear – white boxers with red hearts should always be revealed when their pants drop to the ground…

Mike Peters is one of the all time greatest cartoonists - here he is giving the commencement address at his alma mater, Washington University in St. Louis. Watch Mike, he's fun:
Coffee addicts rejoice! A new study shows the coffee, either caffeinated or decaffeinated, may actually help extend the lives of people who drink it. This is good news for cartoonists, since our great ideas are fueled by bottomless cups of joe!
Here are five funny coffee cartoon that are bound to make you chuckle...
Today was a bit of a mini-roller coaster ride for Facebook stock. After being initially offered at $38 a share, the price quickly jumped 15 percent in early trading before dropping off and ending back down at $38.23 a share.
Did you take the plunge and purchase any stock? Here's what a handful of cartoonists thought of all the hype surrounding Facebook's IPO...
Every Friday, we collect the best political cartoons of the week and stuff them into one big, glorious slideshow.
So just relax and catch up on a week’s worth of news with our Best Cartoons of the Week slideshow.