GOP, Trump
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Musk, Trump and DOGE
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Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy plans to headline a fundraiser for a challenger to the establishment pick in Michigan's Senate race.
GOP supporters are proclaiming “victory” for President Donald Trump after the Supreme Court ruled on Friday that his administration can revoke the temporary legal protections for half a million immigrants for now.
A little-known three-judge panel’s ruling against President Donald Trump’s tariffs could have presented an easy off-ramp for him to call it quits on an economic policy unpopular with the public and worrisome for GOP lawmakers.
Senate Republicans say they intend to change the House-passed bill, and some pointed to changes to Medicaid as a possible red line.
As Trump appears to dismiss a 2028 White House run, GOP figures like JD Vance and Marco Rubio gain attention, while Democrats begin early moves in next presidential race.
Speaker Mike Johnson characterized the White House proposals as a shift in focus from the mandatory side of the budget — which the reconciliation bill would cut — to discretionary spending on the operating expenses of federal agencies that the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency has tried to slash.
Grimm, a Republican, was convicted in November 2014 of tax fraud and related charges stemming from his ownership of a Manhattan restaurant before joining Congress. Prosecutors said he underreported wages and revenue to the government, and that he filed false tax documents.
Rep. Ashley Hinson defended President Donald Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' as crowds booed the president's agenda at her town halls.
President Donald Trump on Wednesday issued several more pardons, including those for his political allies: former U.S. House member Michael Grimm of New York and ex-Connecticut Gov. John Rowland.
U.S. Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) gave a curt answer to a voter during a contentious town hall when discussing the latest changes to Medicaid that were passed in the House GOP package earlier this month. She was defending the cuts endorsed by House Republicans, saying that only those ineligible for benefits would be cut from the program.