For years, internet users have shared a quote about how to measure the success of welfare programs, attributing the words to Ronald Reagan, the former U.S. president and California governor.
US President Joe Biden has often been photographed enjoying a vanilla ice cream cone, former president Ronald Reagan liked jelly beans and John F Kennedy loved clam chowder. As president-elect Donald Trump's inauguration approaches,
Jimmy Carter nodded politely toward Ronald Reagan at the Republican's inauguration. Richard Nixon clasped John F. Kennedy’s hand and offered the new Democratic president a word of
Trump's clemency for Jan. 6 rioters and Biden's reprieve for family represent merely the latest chapters in an odd history of the presidential pardon.
The new president issued an executive order Sunday that looks to maximize pumping of the Central Valley Project. It’s the only one he can control.
Behind-the-scenes manoeuvrings by the Reagan campaign and Team Trump clinched deals in the eleventh hour, showing Jimmy Carter and Joe Biden in a poor light
We know that U.S. vice presidents are often the objects of humorous jabs for their secondary role in the executive branch or their public mishaps.
Ours is a government of laws, but also of persons. Laws alone cannot save us from stupidity or tyranny. The law can only save us if there is virtue and there is shame. Whatever became of shame? And the cultivation of virtue?
Johnson, 1965: The United States Marine Band performed the national anthem.Richard Nixon ... U.S. Marine Band sang the national anthem.Ronald Reagan, 1981: Amateur singer Juanita Booker sang ...
Republicans pride themselves as champions of law and order. How can members of the New Jersey GOP accept Trump's Jan. 6 pardons?
MSNBC contributor Elie Mystal ranted about President Donald Trump 's first week in office blaming white people and the price of eggs for his 'disgusting version of America.'
And some pointed to that messy web of inflation causes and effects, which included the slowdown of the Vietnam War and an unusually low unemployment rate. A week before the boycott began, Nixon set the ceiling on meat prices as they rose 8 percent over the course of March 1973.