Trump is the most transformative one-term President in 175 years, but historians will not be kind.
Distinguished historians have written twenty essays on alleged misconduct in Presidential administrations since George Washington.
What is this latest impeachment gambit really about? Of course, it is meant to discredit President Trump’s supporters and perhaps stop him from running for president again.
Partisan politics, plus the media’s focus on Clinton’s personal life, created a presidency under siege and consumed by scandals—some serious, others trivial.
Here is probably the most wide-ranging look at Presidential misbehavior ever published in a magazine.
Although he was scrupulously honest, Andrew Johnson angered members of Congress by thwarting their plans for Reconstruction.
Representatives objected to Tyler’s vetoes, claiming the President should be “dependent upon and responsible to” Congress.
Congress debated a resolution to impeach Jefferson because of an appointment that Federalists thought suspicious — an early precedent that clarified Congressional roles in oversight.
The Senate convened twenty years ago to determine whether President Bill Clinton had committed "high crimes and misdemeanors"
William Jefferson Clinton, Andrew Johnson, and the judgment of history
In which a President fails to fulfill his constitutional duty to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” And a reluctant Congress acts.
Was it, as Navy Secretary Welles believed, “a conspiracy to overthrow the government”?
One of the saddest tales in American history tells how a well-intentioned President lost a dazzling opportunity