The House Intelligence Committee is being given a makeover, with Republicans who have “more MAGA-friendly credentials” replacing some other GOP members. The committee was seen as one of the last bastions of old-school Republicanism in Congress before Trump ordered a reshuffle.
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) on Tuesday said that he disagreed with President Donald Trump's decision to pardon violent Capitol rioters who assaulted police officers.Speaking with reporters, Tillis said he's worried that Trump's pardons could set a precedent that "police officers could potentially be
More broadly, Trump is calling for nothing less than a return to the 19th-century notion of Manifest Destiny (a term he explicitly used) in the manner of William McKinley (whom he described as “a great president”).
Speaker Mike Johnson has made the House Intelligence Committee far friendlier to the MAGA movement, and the adverse consequences are likely to linger.
If anyone was expecting moderate Republicans in Congress to temper Donald Trump’s more extreme plans on immigration and tariffs, the president-elect doesn’t plan to give them the chance, Trump told lawmakers this week.
The farcical nature of the inauguration was a fitting reminder that everything about the MAGA movement is a scam.
Steve Bannon, the rumpled bard of MAGA, made a characteristically bold and combative promise when asked recently about the relationship between Donald Trump’s base and Elon Musk, tech titan, world’s richest man and Trump bestie.
Speaker Johnson bows to Mar-a-Lago in ousting Intel Chair Mike Turner.
HuffPost’s top editor resigned as fury grows that the parent company was “bowing to MAGA” ahead of Donald Trump taking office this month.
The alliance between Speaker Mike Johnson and President-elect Donald Trump may prove to be the most important relationship in Washington.
MSNBC's Joe Scarborough tapped the brakes on Donald Trump's defense nominee ahead of his confirmation hearing this week.Pete Hegseth could face a contentious hearing Tuesday if Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) voices her concerns about his views on women in the military,
Donald Trump's approval rating is at 56 percent, according to the head pollster at Rasmussen. Rasmussen is a conservative-leaning polling company. The poll's margin of error was not immediately available and had a sample size of 407.