News

Opinion The Reichstag fire’s lesson to guard democracy The tribunes of Berlin’s Reichstag, the German parliament, lie in ruins Feb. 28, 1933, one day after a fire destroyed the building.
Germany's president has inaugurated the rebuilt tower of a church that became associated with the Nazis' takeover of power and whose remains were demolished under communist rule.
A British architect, Norman Foster, was rebuilding the Reichstag to house the reunified Germany’s parliament, which was still seated in the modest and sleepy postwar capital of Bonn.
After former President Trump was shot in Butler, Pa., "Reichstag fire moment" was trending. Some wonder what the Nazi-era term means.
Striking through their duly elected Reichstag, the German people hurled at President Paul von Hindenburg last week the most savage rebuke possible, short of revolution. In the Speaker's Chair when ...
On February 27, 1933, the Reichstag, or German Parliament building, burned down. This was less than a month after Adolph Hitler took power as Germany's Fuhrer. Hitler and his Nazi Party used the ...
America’s Enabling Act moment: Congress’ coming denouement and the Reichstag test As echoes of 1933 grow louder, will Congress act or must the American people shut the country down?
Germany's president on Thursday inaugurated the rebuilt tower of a church that became associated with the Nazis ' takeover of power and whose remains were demolished under communist rule.