President Donald Trump was sworn into office Monday. And he didn’t waste anytime. Trump signed a slew of executive orders. GOP strategist, Colin Reed, talks
Sunlight is pouring over the entire world,” the newly sworn-in president told America, as former presidents Bush, Clinton, Obama, and Biden looked on, without clapping.
President-elect Donald Trump held a massive rally in DC Sunday, mere hours before taking the oath of office as the 47th US president.
The Simpsons writer, Dan Greaney, had an eerie admission about the infamous episode that referenced Donald Trump.
Given the chaos of Trump’s first term, and his radical plans for the second, Vanity Fair writers and editors take stock on day one of what’s sure to be a tumultuous time in America.
Even more than in his first term, President Trump has mounted a fundamental challenge to the norms and expectations of what a president can and should do.
He talked of a new Manifest Destiny and a “Golden Age.” He invoked the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt. An honor guard appeared with tricorn hats,
During their first news conference since Trump took office, House Republican leaders were effusive about the new administration and noted there is a lot of "anxious anticipation" about what they're going to do with their new trifecta. "We will deliver," Johnson pledged.
We are exiting the era of hyperpolitics. All flames — even the hottest and most spectacular — eventually burn out. Perhaps the most important way to understand the causes that dominated the hyperpolitical era is that they each,
On Tuesday night, President Donald Trump issued a pardon to Ross Ulbricht, who ran the dark web marketplace Silk Road under the pseudonym “Dread Pirate Roberts.” Ulbricht has been serving a life sentence without parole since 2015, when he was convicted of multiple charges, including the distribution of narcotics.
A t the height of his powers, Jay Gould was known by many names, few of them flattering. People called him the Skunk of Wall Street, the Napoleon of Finance, and Mephistopheles himself. Gould, alongside rivals such as Cornelius Vanderbilt and John D. Rockefeller, was a captain of industry—or, as they would all come to be known, a robber baron.
As far as policy accomplishments are concerned, it could very well turn out to be as underwhelming as the first.