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Rebels, Robbers and Radicals” brings the document alive through court cases of real people involved in real struggles.
Congressman Mike Levin introduced an amendment to the House Appropriations Committee markup, highlighting that Congress, not ...
In reality, however, the legislative branch has ceded much power to the executive branch in recent years, ... Mr. Whipple’s book about the 2024 campaign comes to a somewhat different conclusion.
The Trump White House has a new target in its campaign to expand executive power: the Library of Congress. Never mind the name — administration lawyers are now arguing that the main research ...
He says the Constitution allows his unprecedented executive branch purge. As President Donald Trump works at a breakneck speed to implement his second-term agenda, including wholesale firings and ...
Much of the litigation surrounding the new Trump administration turns in part on "unitary executive" theory - the idea that the president should have near-total control over the executive branch ...
A second federal court has blocked President Trump's authority to unilaterally impose tariffs. We speak with the plaintiff in the first case, a wine company that took on the executive branch and won.
The United States Constitution is built on a system of separation of powers, ensuring that each branch of government—the legislative, executive, and judicial—operates within its own clearly ...
In this book, O’Neil reveals how the Left’s NGO apparatus pursues its woke agenda, maneuvering like an octopus by circumventing Congress and entrenching its interests in the federal government.
And despite coming into office with such power vested in the executive, President Donald Trump has overseen an aggressive effort to slash his own branch, to the relief of conservatives in Congress.
NPR has identified nearly 40 small, independent entities – both inside and outside the federal government's control – that a team of young DOGE staffers has tried to access in recent weeks.
Executive orders and administrative actions by the president can command the executive branch regarding how to carry out the law, but not regarding whether to do so, and they are reviewable by courts.