The White House apparently wants The Associated Press to use the Trump-approved name for the Gulf of Mexico. If it sounds ...
Laws governing several, lesser-known agencies protect certain officials from removal, except for cause. Trump is betting ...
As a former U.S. attorney put it, New York Mayor Eric Adams’ case sends the message that “public officials who support Trump’s agenda will get out of jail free.” ...
The question isn’t why the defense secretary faced pushback at U.S. European Command headquarters; the question is whether he’ll see more protests soon.
The USAID inspector general did his job and did it well. For his trouble, the White House fired him. The move was quickly labeled the “ midnight massacre .” Late on a Friday night, in the first week ...
The House speaker was asked about the judiciary's role in assessing the White House's radical ambitions. His response was a mess.
How does the president deal with the fact that his 2024 Democratic rival received 75 million votes? By pretending the accurate vote totals aren’t real.
When taking stock of the president's overt hostility toward the rule of law, don't forget his list of legally dubious firings.
What do Russell Vought, Doug Collins and Ric Grenell have in common? Trump gave them important jobs — and then gave them additional important jobs.
A conservative group said it was raising private funds for a border wall. The result culminated in Steve Bannon pleading guilty to defrauding donors.
Fox News’ Bret Baier asked the president, “Do you view Vice President JD Vance as your successor, the Republican nominee in 2028?” Trump didn’t say yes.
The message to politicians convicted or accused of corruption couldn’t be clearer: You have a friend in the Oval Office.
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