As President Joe Biden gets ready to leave office, we consider his accomplishments, failures, and what his legacy will be.
A vast left-wing influence campaign I call the Woketopus is responsible for the Joe Biden malaise. My book shows how to combat it.
Ed O’Keefe wondered whether Biden would be compared “alongside Franklin Roosevelt and LBJ and George Washington in terms of great presidents ... He invoked the ridiculous trope of Biden as “‘Scranton Joe,’ as someone who was an advocate for ...
Anti-Trump columnist for The Washington Post, George Will, wrote a scathing op-ed of President Biden's actions as president as he prepares to leave office.
In his final hours in office, President Joe Biden issued blanket preemptive pardons Monday to prominent government officials, the bipartisan January 6 th committee, and members of his own family, which Biden said was necessary to prevent retribution from President-elect Donald Trump.
President Joe ... Biden did last night when he expressed gratitude and touted his own accomplishments. But, only a few focus on threats to American democracy. Indeed, at the genre's origin, George ...
The 46th president's successes and failures — and the predecessors who invite the closest comparisons to Joe Biden as he leaves office.
From clemency to conservation, the outgoing president pushes to cement his legacy ahead of a successor determined to erase it.
Former President Joe Biden speaks at Joint Base Andrews following inauguration ceremonies for President Donald Trump on Monday.
Apart from a lot of sentimental boilerplate, President Joe Biden's farewell address had a key message: The super-rich have too much power in politics.
(AP Photo/Jon Elswick) President Joe Biden speaks before signing an executive ... March 31, 2017, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File) President George W. Bush pauses at his desk after he signed a Joint Resolution commemorating Ronald Reagan ...
Forty years after Washington’s farewell and two decades before the Civil War, President Andrew Jackson offered his own reflections at the end of his two terms. He targeted the excesses of “state pride” which “may in time create mutual hostility… and foment…fatal divisions…”