Keyword: Executive-Power
Executive-Power
has 98.7% among keywords.
BS Score: 21.3%.
Articles analyzed: 1.
Words analyzed: 344.
Analyzed articles
The Daily Caller
- By Mary Rooke
- 7/2/2026, 7:51 PM
Framing Effect 84.9% - Quote-first Misdirection 70.9% - Negativity Bias 60.5%
The U.S. Supreme Court just overturned an almost 100-year precedent, paving the way for President Donald Trump to fulfill a 2016 campaign promise. Trump vowed to “drain the swamp” during his first presidential campaign. He wanted to end the administrative state that operated with limited accountability. It looks like the Supreme Court... more
Washington Monthly
- By Peter M. Shane
- 7/1/2026, 1:39 AM
Biased Writer Voice 37.4% - Negativity Bias 25.5% - Appeal to Authority 13.2%
The Supreme Court’s June 29 decision upholding President Donald Trump’s firing of Federal Trade Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter is being widely and accurately reported as portending a huge expansion of presidential control over the administrative state. For once, Trump’s social media post calling Trump v. Slaughter the Supreme Court’s... more
Vox
- By Zack Beauchamp
- 6/30/2026, 8:05 PM
Negativity Bias 39.2% - Biased Writer Voice 18.4% - Appeal to Authority 15.4%
Just what President Donald Trump needed: more unchecked power. In the Supreme Court’s new Trump vs. Slaughter opinion, the court ruled that the president’s firing of the Federal Trade Commission’s Rebecca Slaughter was lawful — even though he did not follow Congress’s explicit requirement that FTC commissioners might only be dismissed... more
Reason.com
- By Damon Root
- 6/30/2026, 11:00 AM
Biased Writer Voice 25.6% - Negativity Bias 17.2% - Pessimism Bias 14%
In 1935, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously stopped President Franklin Roosevelt from firing a commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for purely political reasons. The FTC "cannot in any proper sense be characterized as an arm or an eye of the executive," the Court declared in <em>Humphrey's Executor v. United States</em>. On... more
The Federalist
- By John C. Eastman
- 6/29/2026, 7:44 PM
Biased Writer Voice 38.8% - Negativity Bias 13.3% - Confirmation Bias 10.9%
Just minutes apart Monday morning, Chief Justice John Roberts handed down two of the most consequential separation-of-powers opinions of the Supreme Court’s October 2025 term. In one, he overruled one of the New Deal's foundational precedents and dramatically restored presidential control over the executive branch. In the other, he... more
New York Post
- By Jonathan Turley
- 6/29/2026, 7:13 PM
Biased Writer Voice 33.9% - Negativity Bias 15% - Appeal to Authority 13.2%
On Monday, Donald Trump sealed one of the most lasting parts of his legacy. In Trump v. Slaughter, the Court reaffirmed and reinforced the authority of presidents to determine who will carry out the functions of the Executive Branch. In so doing, the Court overruled one of the long-standing limits of presidential power in Humphrey’s... more
Mother Jones
- By Pema Levy
- 6/29/2026, 5:29 PM
Negativity Bias 52.2% - Biased Writer Voice 43.7% - Appeal to Authority 22.4%
The Roberts Court Just Put Trump in Charge of Independent Agencies, Vastly Expanding His Powers “Today, the majority reshapes our Government.” The Supreme Court on Monday gave the president the authority to remove the leadership of most agencies that Congress had set up to act independently of presidential control. The ruling in Trump v.... more
The Washington Post
- By Justin Jouvenal
- 6/29/2026, 2:43 PM
Framing Effect 100% - Biased Writer Voice 100% - Availability Heuristic 54.4%
The Supreme Court greatly expanded President Donald Trump’s control over the federal bureaucracy Monday, but stopped short of allowing him to undermine the independence of the Federal Reserve, in a pair of rulings that amount to one of the largest verdicts on the scope of presidential power in decades. The justices allowed the president... more
NPR
- By Andrea Hsu, Nina Totenberg
- 6/29/2026, 2:33 PM
Negativity Bias 20.4% - Appeal to Emotion 14.6% - Framing Effect 10.5%
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday overturned a 91-year-old precedent that has prevented presidents from removing members of independent agencies at will. The decision represents a significant win for the Trump administration and a major expansion of the president's control over parts of the government once seen as a check on his powers.... more
Reason.com
- By Gene Healy
- 6/26/2026, 7:45 PM
Biased Writer Voice 50.3% - Negativity Bias 42.8% - Hasty Generalization 17.1%
On Tuesday, the Senate briefly asserted its constitutional prerogative over war and peace. In a 50–48 vote, with four Republicans joining the majority, it passed a resolution directing President Donald Trump to remove United States Armed Forces from hostilities against Iran. Politico called it a "surprise blow to Trump." The New York... more