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A single book cannot capture Ronald Reagan's life-Reagan himself wrote his autobiography twice. Yet with all the books available about Reagan by historians, journalists, and political aides ...
Citing Congressional records and Reagan's own diaries, he catalogues -- in stunning detail -- how the Reagan laissez-faire administration launched a campaign of deregulation and corporate tax cuts ...
“Reagan’s Secret War” documents many meetings of the National Security Planning Group that show how President Reagan sought to replace the old policy of facing off with the Soviet Union ...
Anti-Trump Republicans revere Ronald Reagan as Trump’s opposite—yet in critical ways Reagan may have been his forerunner.
The term “peace through strength" dates back to the 1960s when Barry Goldwater sought the Oval Office in 1964.
This faction includes figures such as Dan Negrea, a State Department official during the Trump administration and a co-author of a recent book arguing that Mr. Reagan laid the foundation for Mr ...
They clearly revered Reagan as president. A lot of this administration has been an effort to reopen those wounds of the Reagan years, or those glories, depending on how you see it.
A new book by Steve Oney traces the public radio network’s turbulent history as it once again becomes a political target.
Reeves stresses, however, that, while the achievements of Reagan's first administration might have looked good after the failures of the Carter presidency, they would not impress historians.
Corporations wanted to keep affirmative action when President Ronald Reagan sought to undo it. Now, with DEI under attack, businesses are reacting similarly.
William Inboden’s book argues that the president’s savvy policies, more than any Soviet actions, brought the conflict to an end.
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