The amazing thing about President Trump’s revolutionary rejection of the old order was that it occurred in five different areas. It was decisive in each.
In summoning people to his vision for the future, Donald Trump assembled a dizzying collage of time-honored and time-worn American myths, tropes and ideals.
While most US presidents are merely sworn into office, Donald Trump stormed into Washington this week resembling the commander of a liberating army.
Trump took office in 2017 without the support of much of the institutional Republican party, 1 but came to Washington hoping to become the same lovable host he’d been on TV. Instead, his most substantial opposition came from inside the GOP—people like Jeff Flake, John McCain, and Mitt Romney. (And also Jim Mattis, John Kelly, and Rex Tillerson.)
The second term of Donald Trump marks an irreversible collapse of capitalist democracy in America. Only a socialist movement of the working class can provide an alternative.
A bill introduced in the U.S. House aims to carve President Donald Trump's face on Mount Rushmore, but faces potential roadblocks.
An honor guard appeared with tricorn hats, fifes and drums — all traditional Revolutionary War iconography ... forget our country,” President Donald Trump said. In summoning people to his ...
The taunting post was just one in a recent string of comments from Trump suggesting that the United States annex Canada and make it the 51st U.S. state. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau posted an unambiguous response on X: “There isn’t a snowball’s chance in hell that Canada would become part of the United States.”
As he returns to the Oval Office, Donald Trump has promised 'a golden age' after he was 'saved by God to make America great again.' Is his optimism justified?
On his first day in the White House, President Donald Trump gave commutations and pardons to every defendant charged in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Many assaulted police.
Ali Al-Ansari, media attache to the Qatari Embassy to the United States, told Newsweek his nation "appreciates the important role and positive impact of President Trump and his administration, particularly the efforts of his special envoy Steve Witkoff, in finalizing the agreement."
The move is meant to please Trump voters, punish perceived enemies and represents “the most politically saturated security action since the Oppenheimer case in the 1950s.”