Politics
UK Appoints First Woman as Official Artist of General Election
Cornelia Parker will create a piece for the Parliamentary Art Collection
The US Declared “Loyalty Day” in the 1950s to Erase Worker Protest
Under Eisenhower during the Cold War, "Loyalty Day" was declared to paper over International Workers' Day
George Washington's Congress Got Off to an Embarrassing Start
The new federal government was plagued with absences and excuses—until James Madison helped kick things into gear
George Washington Had Nothing Good to Say About Nepotism
The first president was exceedingly wary of any semblance of impropriety
The Debate Over Executive Orders Began With Teddy Roosevelt's Mad Passion for Conservation
Teddy used nearly 10 times as many executive orders as his predecessor. The repercussions are still felt today
The Tournament Scrabble Dictionary Contains More Than A Hundred Slurs
One woman first raised the issue of the Scrabble dictionary containing offensive words in the 1990s
Marine Le Pen Denies State’s Role in Deporting French Jews During WWII
Approximately 13,000 Jews were arrested by French authorities in July of 1942
Liberals and Conservatives Read Totally Different Books About Science
The good news: Everyone likes dinosaurs
Proposed Test Heats Up the Debate on Solar Geoengineering
Harvard scientists are moving ahead with plans to investigate using particles to reflect some of the sun's radiation
How Woodrow Wilson’s War Speech to Congress Changed Him – and the Nation
In 70 days in 1917, President Wilson converted from peace advocate to war president
How the Bloodiest Mutiny in British Naval History Helped Create American Political Asylum
Outrage over the revolt spurred the U.S. to deliver on a promise of the Revolution
By the Numbers: The United States of Refugees
President Trump’s order temporarily barring all refugees and many immigrants has ignited debate about U.S. policies toward outsiders
The Inside Story of Richard Nixon’s Ugly, 30-Year Feud with Earl Warren
Their dislike for each other set the tone for Supreme Court politics for decades to come
The Abdication of Nicholas II Left Russia Without a Czar for the First Time in 300 Years
Events in Saint Petersburg 100 years ago brought the end to the Romanov dynasty
The Myth That Washington Was a Swamp Will Never Go Away
It makes for a catchy slogan used by politicians of all persuasions, but there's little truth to it
How Albert Einstein Used His Fame to Denounce American Racism
The world-renowned physicist was never one to just stick to the science
For More Than 150 Years, Texas Has Had the Power to Secede…From Itself
A quirk of a 19th-century Congressional resolution could allow Texas to split up into five states
The Political Cartoon That Explains the Battle Over Reconstruction
Take a deep dive into this drawing by famed illustrator Thomas Nast
The Century-Long History of Tapping Wall Street to Run the Government
Looking to the one-percent to lead the country goes back to the era of World War I
In the Congressional Fight Over Slavery, Decorum Went Out the Door
Amid today's dissent over proper Senate behavior, take a look back at when an assault in the Senate divided the nation
Page 15 of 27