From James Monroe to Donald Trump, it’s clear that the executive branch’s framework to national foreign policy has taken drastic—often inverted—contortions of its original executive, and America’s first president, George Washington. From concurrent stewardship to blatant self-interest, America’s executive has exhibited radically different apporaches of the Constitutional role of commander in chief.
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Presidential USFP Speeches
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From James Monroe to Donald Trump, it’s clear that the executive branch’s framework to national foreign policy has taken drastic—often inverted—contortions of its original executive, and America’s first president, George Washington. From concurrent stewardship to blatant self-interest, America’s executive has exhibited radically different apporaches of the Constitutional role of commander in chief.