
Trump is making America constitutionally literate: By violating the Constitution
If Donald Trump is remembered for anything, it may be his unintentional role in reviving public interest in the U.S. Constitution.
If Donald Trump is remembered for anything, it may be his unintentional role in reviving public interest in the U.S. Constitution.
What we’re witnessing is the calculated use of emergency powers to concentrate power in the hands of the president, enrich the Deep State, and dismantle what remains of economic and constitutional safeguards.
James Madison University in Harrisonburg has announced that Dr. James C. Schmidt will serve as its seventh president.
A death investigation is under way after a former federal prosecutor was found dead in a home in Alexandria on Saturday morning.
U.S. Sens. Mark R. Warner of Virginia and Chris Van Hollen of Maryland have introduced the Protect Our Probationary Employees Act.
Jim Londos was the biggest star in pro wrestling, and arguably in all of American sports, in the 1920s and 1930s.
Sixth District Republican Congressman Ben Cline insists that “(t)here is no evidence to support the allegation that Elon Musk or his team has unlawfully accessed or seized sensitive data.”
Good news on the economic front: the ill-conceived Trump tariffs on Mexico, and Mexico’s retaliatory tariffs announced in response, are on pause for one month.
While the news media fixates on the extent to which Project 2025 may be the Trump Administration’s playbook for locking down the nation, there is a more subversive power play taking place under cover of Trump’s unique brand of circus politics.
Donald Trump thinks the world of tariffs. “Tariffs are the greatest thing ever invented,” Trump said in September at a town hall event in Michigan.