"Their love is eternal," said Mike Love during Ronald Reagan's inaugural ball in 1985. "And their hearts will always be full of spring."
Ronald and Nancy Reagan were disappointed, but felt they had no choice. That's what White House Press Secretary Larry Speakes told reporters on Jan. 18, 1985, after the Republican president and first
Stuart K. Spencer, the California political strategist who guided Ronald Reagan's ascent from Hollywood to the governor's mansion, and ultimately to the presidency, has died at age 97.
In March 1965, a washed-up B-movie actor dialed a couple of young Republican operatives and invited them to lunch at his home in Pacific Palisades. Ronald Reagan was thinking of trying his hand at politics: a long-shot bid for California governor against a sitting Democrat.
Ronald and Nancy Reagan Felt They Had No Choice Ronald and ... housed at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in California. The transcripts from 1985 shed light on the Reagans ...
according to archived transcripts of press briefings housed at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in California. President-elect Donald Trump's decision to take the oath of office ...
Ronald and Nancy Reagan were disappointed ... housed at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in California. “There was high-level medical and military consultation and it was ...
Stu Spencer was not afraid to speak truth to power. It helped him hold the position of California's preeminent Republican consultant for decades.
Stu Spencer was not afraid to speak truth to power. It helped him hold the position of California’s preeminent Republican consultant for decades.
Latest news and live updates on the inauguration of Donald Trump after his election victory. Follow live as the event unfolds in Washington, D.C.
After a scripted half-hour inaugural address, President Donald Trump went off on a lengthy, unscripted riff to an overflow crowd at the Capitol -- venting about a “rigged” 2020 election and blasting former President Joe Biden for 11th-hour pardons of lawmakers who investigated the Jan.
On average, Mike Lee posted to X every 28 minutes over the last six months of 2024 — an astonishing pace that critics say shows he's not serious about the work of a U.S. senator, but allies say it lets Lee speak directly to supporters.