In January of 1973, just days after Johnson died of a heart attack, a newly reelected Nixon announced plans to terminate the ...
The president’s heavy-handed approach to traditional journalists has the hallmarks of an attempted crackdown 50 years ago.
This initiative was not the handiwork of left-wing liberals but of the administration of Richard Nixon, a moderately conservative Republican who was a critic of government intervention in the economy.
Fearing public backlash over bombing an officially neutral nation, the Nixon administration kept Operation Menu secret from the American public — until The New York Times broke the news in May.
Federal judges are ruling against some of President Trump's executive orders. But who enforces a judicial ruling against the president? NPR asks University of Texas law professor Tara Grove.
"The level of corporate fundraising that takes place under Nixon reaches an entirely new level," Koncewicz told Salon. "Pre-1972, you don't see the same kind of cozy public relationships between an ...
Editor’s note: This article is one in a five-part series looking back on the life of one of Duke’s most infamous alumni — Richard Nixon. Read the previous installments on Nixon’s childhood ...
Justices have cleared the way for hundreds of Trump administration documents to be handed to a panel investigating the Jan. 6 attack. A law scholar explains what that means for executive privilege.
"Pre-1972, you don't see the same kind of cozy public relationships between an administration and different corporations." Trump and Nixon are far from the only presidents to rake in money for ...
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