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Fellow citizens, what are you going to do between now and July 4, 2026, to protect and preserve our independence from a ...
The Fulcrum on MSN1dOpinion
Give Me Liberty or a Tinpot Dictator
Peggy Noonan has been a voice of conservative reflection for The Wall Street Journal since leaving the Ronald Reagan ...
Now that the Republican Party is in power, we see the government infringing on virtually every aspect of American ...
In just over five months, the president has checked numerous boxes for dictatorial tendencies, writes Steve Corbin.
What do you see when you look at pictures of President Trump’s cabinet?” asks writer David French in an interactive web exclusive that ...
Opinion
The Dispatch on MSN3dOpinion
What Ronald Reagan Taught Me About Civility
As Jonah Goldberg explained on The Remnant, Ronald Reagan’s genius was in how he communicated: ...
Her insight might just as well describe another decades-long D.C. cycle: lose an election, gain a think tank. The major parties have a habit of responding to electoral defeat by c ...
O’Reilly contrasted this approach with previous Republican administrations, such as those of George W. Bush and Ronald Reagan, where Cabinet members wielded significant policy influence. He drew a ...
Reagan saw his 1980 election, when he carried 44 states, as a mandate for sweeping change, a sharp break from the New Deal-Great Society expansive government that Democrats had championed since 1932.
The first time that a Cabinet member being kept away from a presidential speech to Congress was publicly divulged was President Ronald Reagan’s Education Secretary Terrel Bell in 1981.
The first time that a Cabinet member being kept away from a presidential speech to Congress was publicly divulged was President Ronald Reagan’s Education Secretary Terrel Bell in 1981.
Ronald Reagan’s 1980 presidential campaign—whose slogan was, yes, “Let’s Make America Great Again”—called for the dismantlement of the new Department of Education.