The administration misinterprets a Nixon-era law in its bid to reimpose tariffs struck down by the Supreme Court.
The US Constitution promises that no president is above the law. But history shows how the Supreme Court, Congress and politics have alternately restrained, enabled and reshaped executive power ...
Americans took a break from their partisan vituperation in February to mull over newly revealed testimony that Richard Nixon ...
On President’s Day, the American Conservative, a journal founded by Patrick J. Buchanan, one of the all too few remaining Richard Nixon loyalists, published a piece by Alan Pell Crawford about the ...
From Jefferson to Lincoln, Nixon to Bush, no president’s agenda has been so thoroughly undercut by the Supreme Court.
Opinion: The president’s tariff workaround is just another attempt to ignore the law and dare courts to step in.
Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Feb. 25, according to the Tribune’s archives. Is an important event missing from this date? Email us. Front page flashback: Feb. 26, 1974 ...
At one time, Republicans held the health and welfare of citizens and the environment in our best interest.
Donald Trump will likely pardon anyone in his administration who may face prosecution—and possibly himself, a former U.S.
A little noticed lawsuit filed by the Trump Justice Department challenging affirmative action in the workplace may be headed to the Supreme Court.
Throughout the 1960s, the United States faced a “balance-of-payments deficit”: Too many overseas holders of dollars sought to convert them into gold. As the government’s official gold reserves were ...