President Donald Trump wants to make Ronald Reagan’s long-ridiculed Star Wars missile defense program from the 1980s a reality. And he insists that new tech can finally make it happen. Trump gave a rambling speech to Congress Tuesday night that included the kinds of dishonest nonsense the fascist president has long been known for.
Democratic U.S. Senator Elissa Slotkin of Michigan, a moderate elected in a state carried by Donald Trump last year, made a case for bipartisan values and invoked former Republican president Ronald Reagan in her party's rebuttal to Trump's address to Congress.
But it's called something else: a joint address to Congress. And it has its origins in the first term of President Ronald Reagan. The U.S. Constitution requires that the president updates Congress and recommends policies,
President Ronald Reagan laid the rhetorical foundations for the National Endowment for Democracy in a 1982 speech to the British Parliament. Support for its creation in Congress was bipartisan.
Congressman (CA-48), whose 48th District includes Murrieta, Temecula, and a wide swath of San Diego County, put forward Trump's name for the prize. "Not since Ronald Reagan has an American president better represented the national resolve of peace through strength or the fundamental case for a world without war,
President Ronald Reagan spoke to the graduating class of the United States Naval Academy. In his remarks, the commander-in-chief committed to giving these graduates the tools they
How worried — or optimistic, depending on your point of view—should you be about the Donald Trump shakeup of Washington? Or put another way, will this firestorm of change last? Trump will address the nation Tuesday night,
President Ronald Reagan and First Lady Nancy Reagan wave to members of the White House staff on the South Lawn in Washington Saturday, April 11, 1981. Reagan returned to the
President Trump announced his desire for a missile-defense system protecting the U.S., labeling it a “Golden Dome.” Trump has taken inspiration from two places: former President Ronald Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative,
At the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa, a quote from former President Ronald Reagan is engraved on one wall. “Let the 5,000-mile border between Canada and the United States stand as a symbol
The Department of Education has been a source of political controversy since opening its doors in 1980 during Jimmy Carter’s presidency. President Ronald Reagan, who was first elected that year, called for it to be disbanded.
The 40th president would be shocked and appalled by last week’s Oval Office dressing-down of a democratic ally. | Opinion