Is President Trump a Nazi
Directly answering the question: based on the reporting provided, is not literally a member of the (which ceased to exist in 1945) nor is there a factual record in these sources that he has formally d...
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Directly answering the question: based on the reporting provided, is not literally a member of the (which ceased to exist in 1945) nor is there a factual record in these sources that he has formally d...
The phrase "One of ours, all of yours" appeared prominently on the lectern at a Department of Homeland Security press conference on January 8, 2026, and circulated rapidly online; photographs and the ...
Photographs and video from a January 8 Homeland Security press event show the phrase “One of ours, all of yours” printed on Secretary Kristi Noem’s podium, and that image prompted widespread denunciat...
President Trump’s second-term personnel actions have produced widely different tallies — from official counts of tens of thousands to media estimates exceeding 300,000 — because reporters and analysts...
R. Alexander “Alex” Acosta is no longer the U.S. Secretary of Labor; he resigned in July 2019 and has since returned to private and public-facing roles. Public records and reporting show he has partic...
Alexander Acosta, as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, approved the controversial non‑prosecution agreement that let Jeffrey Epstein plead to state prostitution charges and serve 13 ...
The October 2025 lapse in Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data collection produced the first-ever missing monthly CPI observation, forcing the agency to cancel the October CPI release and carry forwa...
Federal efforts to spur expansion vary by policy and actor: the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 lays out a broad federal blueprint to reshape and expand presidential control over the executive bran...
There is no single, authoritative count in the provided reporting of how many court rulings the Biden administration “has not complied with” since 2021; available sources document multiple high‑profil...
The Department of Education is undergoing an administration-led reorganization that moves major offices and programs to other federal agencies via interagency agreements — including shifting K–12 and ...
Available reporting shows the Department of Education’s 2025 regulatory work was driven internally through a negotiated rulemaking process and by the administration’s policy agenda — including executi...
The 2025 delisting — a series of interagency agreements that move core Education Department program offices to Labor, Interior, State and HHS — represents a much broader, faster effort to strip functi...
Available reporting shows multiple legal and congressional reactions in 2025 to a range of U.S. Department of Education (ED) actions — including workforce cuts, program transfers, and regulatory chang...
Stakeholders reacted to the Department of Education’s 2025 policy shifts with a mix of alarm, legal challenges and calls for reform: universities and higher‑education leaders warned accreditation and ...
The Department of Education’s recent regulatory proposal that triggers debate about which programs count as “professional” ties eligibility to a short list of named professions — a list that Inside Hi...