As a candidate, Mr Trump promised that he would “shatter the deep state”. Since taking office, it has become more clear what he meant. In a barrage of executive orders, Mr Trump has asserted that he can do just about whatever he likes to the federal government.
Nevada’s attorney general joined a group of more than 20 state attorneys general to file a lawsuit Tuesday challenging the attempt of President Donald Trump’s administration to freeze federal ...
One thing we saw lots of this week as power switched from one political party to the other was presidential pardons.
The American flag will be flown at full staff on January 20 as as Donald Trump is sworn in as ... against Republican incumbent President Gerald Ford. According to the U.S. Department of Veterans ...
Now, it’s the voice of a country in which a majority of voters chose incoming president Donald Trump, a man famous ... President Gerald Ford signed VOA’s charter in 1976.
President-elect Donald Trump is getting inaugurated for ... which has been done by helicopter (weather permitting) since Gerald Ford’s departure in 1977. The new president then heads to the ...
TORONTO — Doug Ford, the premier of Ontario, plans to rain economic punishment on Americans if President Donald Trump targets Canada in a trade war. Ford has threatened to cut power transmission ...
President-elect Donald Trump is getting inaugurated for ... which has been done by helicopter (weather permitting) since Gerald Ford’s departure in 1977. The new president then heads to the ...
Black History Month wasn’t always a monthlong celebration. In February 1926, historian and author Carter G. Woodson created Negro History Week. It was a weeklong celebration in an effort to teach people about African-American history and the contributions of Black people.
Though the 22nd Amendment prohibits Trump from being elected president again, it does not prohibit him from serving as president beyond Jan. 20, 2029. A scholar of politics and history explains.
Nine children of presidents have gotten married at the White House: Maria Hester Monroe, John Adams II, Elizabeth Tyler, Nellie Grant, Alice Lee Roosevelt, Jessie Woodrow Wilson, Eleanor Randolph Wilson, Lynda Bird Johnson, and Tricia Nixon.
Three policy wonks dissect President Donald Trump’s executive orders on border security, immigration, government efficiency and beyond.