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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. October 2006
  3. October 03

Content map

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

Monitor articles for October 03, 2006

  • A soldier returns ... and his mom hopes for meaning
  • Bureaucracy and red tape don't have to rule
  • Etc...
  • Day care goes to the dogs
  • The quiet diplomat who may lead the UN
  • Backstory: Teetering in the treetops in Turkey
  • Afghan politics – one chicken dinner at a time
  • How America grows: A tale of two cities
  • End the blame game and start fighting terror
  • New chapter at Alaska blast site
  • Letters
  • Merger with Al Qaeda deepens threat from Algerian radicals
  • Congress, police thyself
  • John Hammond: a giant of American music
  • Instead of soldiers, they fought fires
  • Iraq war draws foreign jihadists, but not in droves
  • The tale of a native son
  • Tiger, tiger, burning out?
  • Reporters on the Job
  • Crackdown on immigrants empties a town and hardens views
  • Readers' picks
  • Even the poor dine during Ramadan
  • To be alive in a world that is dead
  • World
  • USA
  • Russian banks discover the customer
  • It took a comedy to revive Gandhi's ideals in India
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