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June 6, 2025 When a presidential pen is more than a pen

Among the many fascinations of President Donald Trump is the “autopen” – a device that can sign a document on the president’s behalf. President Trump himself has acknowledged using one. But he relishes the ceremony around signing executive orders with an actual pen, typically a Sharpie. Now the autopen is back in the news, as President Trump orders an investigation into the legality of orders and pardons signed by President Joe Biden with an autopen. The device has also come to symbolize the profound – and growing – power of the American presidency, as I write in today’s Daily.

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Editor’s note: We spoke with writer Erika Page about her recent reporting on Nairobi’s “satellite” cities. Listen here to the latest episode of our “Why We Wrote This” podcast.

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  1. CONTENT MAP
  2. February 1986
  3. February 10

Content map

Please see our Site Map for a guide to site content.

Monitor articles for February 10, 1986

  • Next frontier in women's sports is establishment of pro teams
  • Good Old Gals network & Criminals' responsibility
  • Solo attack on drinking and other bad habits
  • Dear Mr. (or Ms.) Computer:It's time we discussed this confusion about my name . . .
  • Soviet poet turns to film. Yevtushenko's `The Kindergarten' will premiere in US
  • Haiti's new rulers face task of restoring order
  • Coming cuts in dairy supports send chill through wintry Vermont
  • Faced with falling oil revenue, Louisiana tries to close budget gap
  • West Germany's University of Heidelberg builds on 600 years of history
  • A critical look at the `father figure' of modern architecture
  • Will the `Lang solution' to affordable college catch on?
  • Meats and fish cook in a flash in India's ancient clay ovens
  • Graceless
  • Budget picture clouded by ruling that calls part of deficit law illegal
  • Trumpet man
  • Philippines: strife rises over differing vote counts. Vote-count standoff expected to bring protests
  • BE MINE. Make a valentine mailbox
  • The battle for Guadalupe Nuevo. The fight to get out the vote in a low-income section of Manila
  • Listening to the giants
  • Hefty grant is helping Alabama Shakespeare Festival think big
  • Showdown between Marcos, Aquino looms
  • Head of S. Africa's white opposition quits in bid to unite reformists
  • Ed Meese vs. John Marshall. Original intent, or evolutionary view?
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