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One figure held fast to the Kennedy model: Ronald Reagan. When Reagan endorsed New York Rep. Jack Kemp’s big tax-rate-cut plan in 1977, he gave Kennedy credit for hatching the idea.
As Donald Trump crafts his inaugural address, here's a break down of what former presidents focused on during their January speeches.
As President Obama returned to Berlin to speak at Brandenburg Gate, we look back at two famous Berlin speeches by other U.S. presidents, John F. Kennedy in 1963 and Ronald Reagan in 1987.
At a moment centrists are battling progressives for control of the Democratic Party, Mamdani’s sudden stardom is all the buzz ...
WASHINGTON -- Americans finally have narrowed the presidential race to two front-runners: John Kennedy and Ronald Reagan. Too bad they're both busy chatting up Guinevere and Galahad, respectively ...
Frank Sinatra was once close friends with John F. Kennedy In his lifetime, Sinatra would be close friends with both John F. Kennedy and Reagan. He befriended the former before he ran for president.
Why Ronald Reagan beats John F. Kennedy as a better presdient. Tom Deignan @IrishCentral. Jan 27, 2011. The 50th anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s inauguration recently passed, and the event ...
— -- President-elect Donald Trump is reportedly drawing inspiration for the first draft of his inaugural speech from presidents John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan-- which may serve him well ...
When she arrived, Reagan walked with her and Senator Edward Kennedy through the Entrance Hall where the presidential portrait of John F. Kennedy had been rehung at Reagan’s insistence.
Shirley said Reagan, John F. Kennedy and Franklin Delano Roosevelt had all of those traits, while Obama and Clinton didn’t, often delivering well-received speeches that were quickly forgotten ...
Bobby Kennedy’s dream–even more than John Kennedy’s–is the one that has never died for liberals. ... Bobby Kennedy vs. Ronald Reagan–it’s the grand matchup we were denied.
In his 1961 inaugural address, President John F. Summits are tricky: Kennedy, Nixon and Reagan each learned the hard way - Los Angeles Times Presidential summits can be tricky.
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