Trump looks increasingly weak as even his close allies reportedly shun his most drastic tactics.
Propelling this promise with the force of her newfound celebrity, Ocasio-Cortez has transformed the climate debate almost overnight.
We’re in a phase of a familiar cycle.
A Fox host casually suggested that Trump should engage in a shocking abuse of power if Congress keeps investigating him.
Trump's acting attorney general sure doesn't seem to want to tell Congress the whole truth.
Mitch McConnell is terrified of voters.
America has the third-generation head of a white-collar crime family in the White House.
GOP Rep. Devin Nunes' attempt to cover for the Trump administration has been thwarted by House Democrats.
Now that the act has been law for more than and a year, the extent of its deception is coming into focus.
Ernst asked Rao, “Who is at fault in a rape?”—to which Rao responded, “The rapist. The man who commits the rape is, of course, at fault.”
Treasury Department officials are planning ways to keep President Donald Trump’s personal tax returns away from Democratic lawmakers.
“I can come up with all kinds of creative ways to slow down the floor progress,” Rep. Mark Meadows (R-NC), leader of the Freedom Caucus, bragged to Politico.
Regardless, all of this looks very bad for Hawley, who during his campaign pledged he would never leverage “one office to get to another.”
This amendment marks the second time in two months that the Senate has voted on a bipartisan basis to condemn Trump’s foreign policy.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi late Thursday morning held a press conference and she did not disappoint.