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Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The Christian Science Church, and we’ve always been transparent about that.

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Monitor Daily
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. May 2000
  3. May 18

Content map

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

Monitor articles for May 18, 2000

  • A remarkable regeneration, led by beetles
  • Geniality factor puts Bush in lead
  • Interest-rate brake may grab just at election time
  • Have 'We the people' run amok?
  • EPA takes aim at the exhaust pipes of trucks and buses
  • Keep Cool Over Set Fires
  • Actress Deanna Durbin
  • What happened to the training wheels?
  • IN-FLIGHT JOURNAL - DAY 15
  • What can candidates do, really, on education?
  • Hey Barbie, you go girl!
  • Social Security: risky business
  • Who Wants to Be Dicey?
  • Traffic jams? That's so 20th century.
  • News In Brief
  • New cooperation in taming the wild Web
  • Playing along
  • What's New
  • Milosevic steps up war on opposition
  • There's always been an England ... sort of
  • 'Nothing's missing'
  • Parked in Boston
  • Provence is here, wish you were beautiful
  • Urban guru urges small over mega-projects
  • News In Brief
  • The little satellite that could
  • News In Brief
  • Today's Story Line
  • N.Y.C.'s push to protect its cabbies
  • Methodist church faces a divisive issue
  • Policing global labor practices
  • Web medicine
  • News In Brief
  • Putin moves to govern governors
  • Like Lindbergh, only in reverse
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