January: Ron DeSantis
There really was a time when it looked like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis might be a serious challenger to Donald Trump for the 2024 Republican nomination. In November 2022, Elon Musk said heâd support DeSantis, while Rupert Murdochâs New York Postâwhich had dismissed Trump as âunworthyâ of ever returning to the Oval Officeâhailed DeSantis as âDeFutureâ of the GOP.

The Florida governorâs rising star finally fell out of the firmament in January. Following a brutal 30-percentage point defeat to Trump in the Iowa caucuses, DeSantis dropped out on Jan. 21 after blowing tens of millions of dollars and enduring a humiliating, seemingly inexhaustible battery of name-calling from Trump throughout his campaign. DeSantisâ final flourish was immediately falling in line behind the man whoâd spent months trying to get âDeSanctimoniousâ trending.
February: Tucker Carlson
Tucker Carlson was spotted in Moscow early in the month, prompting speculation that Russian President Vladimir Putin was about to grant his first interview with a Western media outlet since the beginning of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. And so it came to pass: The former Fox News starâs sitdown with Putin was released Feb. 8 on X.
Frost/Nixon it was not. Putin opened with a meandering, half-hour lecture on Russiaâs history, which historians trashed and Carlson himself described as âannoying.â Perhaps sensing that his audience would not be all that interested in a rant about the Middle Ages and Prince Yaroslav the Wise, Carlson made repeated attempts to guide Putin away from whatever the hell the strongman felt like rambling about. Putin rebuffed Carlsonâs interruptions and rattled off his grievances against the West unchallenged, leaving Carlson to spend most of the bizarre interview sitting in silence, wearing a bewildered expression.

Carlsonâs trip to Russia led to accusations back home that heâd served as a useful idiot for the Kremlin. Even Putin expressed disappointment that Carlson had gone too easy on him.
March: Katie Britt
In these polarized times, Sen. Katie Britt (R-AL) achieved the unthinkable in March by bringing the nation togetherâin collective bafflement. Her Razzie Award-worthy delivery of the official Republican response to President Joe Bidenâs State of the Union address from an eerily deserted kitchen was immediately denounced as disastrous by members of her own party who found it simultaneously melodramatic and unsettlingâeven before a sex-trafficking survivor accused Britt of having distorted her story for political purposes in the video.
Brittâs performance went viral for all the wrong reasons, and was even memorialized in a Saturday Night Live sketch starring Scarlett Johansson as the GOP senator.
April: Kristi Noem
Speaking of getting loads of attention for all the wrong reasons, enter Kristi Noem. The South Dakota governorâs appositely titled political memoir No Going Back created quite a buzz at the end of Aprilâbefore the book was even publishedâwhen The Guardian reported the jaw-dropping claim that it contained a confession that she had once shot her dog dead in a gravel pit, an anecdote she seemingly included in the book to illustrate an ability to make difficult decisions.

The revelation about the killing of Cricket, a 14-month-old wire-haired pointer, was met with a tsunami of bipartisan condemnation. Worse still for Noem was that it came at a time when she was presumably hoping to boost her popularity on the national stage as Trump was in the market for a running mate. She instead found herself defending the killing of Cricketâand an allegedly smelly goatâfor months.
May: Stormy Daniels
In the arsenal of bombshell moments from Trumpâs hush money trial in New York, none landed with more of a bang than when Stormy Daniels took the stand. The porn starâs claims of a one-night stand with Trump in 2006âand a $130,000 payment to buy her silence on the eve of the 2016 electionâwere at the heart of the case, which eventually led to Trump being found guilty of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records, making him the first American president to be criminally convicted.

The shuddersome details relating to Trumpâs choice of pajamas, deodorant, and bed position were horribly seared into the minds of all who heard them. Trump, of course, continues to deny ever having sex with Daniels.
June: Joe Biden
Itâs fair to say June was a bad month for Biden. Early in the month, his son, Hunter, became the first child of a sitting president to be convicted on criminal charges after he was found guilty of lying about his drug use when he bought a gun in 2018. It went dramatically downhill from there.

On June 27, Biden took part in what proved to be his first and only presidential debate against Trump. The Democratâs halting, befuddled performance ignited a firestorm in his party over his fitness for office. He ended his re-election campaign less than a month later.
July: Donald Trump
Trump was arguably the main character of every month in 2024, but the attention he received in July was enormous, even by his standards. On July 13, a gunman opened fire as Trump spoke at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Before he was rushed off stage by Secret Service agents, photographers captured Trump with his fist in the air and blood pouring down his face in images that were published all over the planet.

The former presidentâs brush with death led to him receiving a quasi-religious reception at the Republican National Convention just days later, where attendees wore ear bandages in a surreal show of solidarity. It was also in July that Judge Aileen Cannon dismissed Trumpâs classified documents case, the first of Trumpâs federal criminal cases to fail to reach trialâbut not the last.
August: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Prominent vaccine skeptic turned actual health and human services secretary-in-waiting Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has similarly had quite the year. In May, it came out that doctors had once discovered a dead worm inside his brain, and he more recently found himself at the center of a salacious sexting scandal with a star political reporter.
It was in early August, however, that he was forced to admit heâd once dumped the carcass of a bear cub in New York Cityâs Central Park as a prank. Then, later in the month, he made headlines again by putting his bizarre presidential campaign out of its misery to fall in behind Trumpâa man heâd slammed as a âterrible presidentâ a month earlierâmaking his wife, Curb Your Enthusiasm star Cheryl Hines, âvery uncomfortableâ in the process. The whole sexting thing probably didnât do much to patch things up.
September: Diddy
Sean âDiddyâ Combs was arrested in a Manhattan hotel room on Sept. 16 and was denied bail the following day after he pleaded not guilty to multiple charges, including sex trafficking. The arrest of one of the most high-profile figures in music came after months of mounting civil cases alleging various sexual misconduct and the publication of a shocking video showing him beating his then-girlfriend, Cassie Ventura, in 2016.
Diddy continues to deny the charges against him. Heâs set to remain behind bars until his trial, which is currently scheduled to begin in May.
October: Elon Musk
Elon Muskâs SpaceX made history in October by spectacularly catching a giant rocket booster in mid-air as it returned to Earth. But the worldâs richest man was more frequently mentioned in the news that month for other unprecedented, more personal milestones. Wearing a black MAGA cap, Musk appeared on stage with Trump for the first timeâat his second rally in Butler, Pennsylvaniaâwhere he described the Republican as the sole candidate âto preserve democracy in America.â He also delighted his hordes of fans by doing a sort of star jump thing.
Their mutual affection has only deepened with Trump handing Musk a major role in his new administration, leading a fake department that may wield real influence to completely reshape the federal government.
November: Kamala Harris
After unexpectedly being parachuted in as the Democratic nominee, Kamala Harris had 107 days to make her case to the nation. Even up to the eve of the election, polls were showing one of the closest races in U.S. history. At the voting booths on Nov. 5, the electorate had other ideas.

Harrisâ defeat triggered angry finger-pointing and solemn soul-searching within the Democratic Party. However, in her concession speech, she struck a defiant tone when she urged her crestfallen supporters to ânever give up.â Whether sheâll follow her own advice and mount another bid for the White House in 2028 remains to be seen.
December: Luigi Mangione
In the final month of 2024, the nation was gripped by the case of a CEOâs killing and his alleged killer. Brian Thompson, 50, the chief executive of UnitedHealthcareâAmericaâs largest health insurance companyâwas fatally shot by a masked gunman in the early hours of Dec. 4 outside the New York Hilton Midtown hotel. After a massive five-day search, police arrested Luigi Mangioneâan Ivy League-educated 26-year-oldâat a McDonaldâs in Pennsylvania.

Mangione has since been charged with state murder and terror charges as well as federal charges, including a murder count, which could carry a death penalty. While prosecutors have accused Mangione of being a murderer bent on sowing terror, others have expressed sympathy and even outright support for his alleged actions over frustrations with the U.S. health insurance system.