By the end of his two terms, Grover Cleveland had vetoed more than 500 bills. Saying no was not a weakness. It was often the point.
President Trump’s image — in paint and pixels, on posters and sculptures — is ubiquitous inside the White House, and beyond.
BRET BAIER (ANCHOR): Marc, history will remember this day, definitely. And the ayatollah has been somebody who has been the ...
[Watch Whole Hog Politics live: Join us today at 9 a.m. ET at TheHill.com as Chris Stirewalt and host Bill Sammon break down this week’s political news and answer questions from a live online audience ...
If Vance really believed his own words — with him, it’s always impossible to say — he shared the strangely widespread ...
To win the White House in 2016, Donald Trump first had to get by former Florida Gov.
The moment from the 57th Primetime Emmy Awards, held on September 18, 2005, has resurfaced amid U.S.-Iranian conflict.
The post Documents Reveal a Web of Financial Ties Between Trump Officials and the Industries They Help Regulate appeared ...
On this day in 1857, the Supreme Court released its opinion in Dred Scott v. Sandford, holding that Scott, an enslaved man who spent time in free territory, was not […] The post SCOTUStoday for Friday ...
His hubris resembles that of the neocons—like them, he believes in American supremacy and is fascinated by the overwhelming ...
Long before he became a presidential candidate and during his first term, Donald Trump made avoiding foreign wars a cornerstone of his agenda. But his position on foreign intervention has shifted.
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with Susan Glasser, who writes the "Letters from Trump's Washington" column in The New Yorker, about the war on Iran and how its early days differ from historical norms.