Donald Trump yet again "joked" about running for a third term yesterday, asking Speaker Mike Johnson if he was "allowed" to stay in the White House after his four years are up. (This is an unconstitutional idea that has also been floated by Steve Bannon and Rep.
Deputy national security adviser Jon Finer; Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif. Steve Bannon, former strategist for President-elect Donald Trump; Jonathan Dekel-Chen and Gillian Kaye, parents of Israeli American held hostage by Hamas.
President-elect Donald Trump's former chief strategist, Steve ... Bannon said. "That’s what happened to Richard Nixon. He ended up owning the war, and it went down as his war, not Lyndon Johnson ...
As we entered the top floor of the Hay-Adams hotel in Washington DC for our first party of Inauguration Day weekend, I spotted financier Nat
Follow updates and coverage on Trump's administration as the president addresses the World Economic Forum and the Senate considers Trump Cabinet nominees.
President Donald Trump's recent apparent switch of positions regarding Russia and Ukraine is surprising many, but it shouldn't.
The clash couldnt have been scripted any better. The occasion was Vice President J.D. Vances first interview since taking office, a sit-down with Margaret Brennan of CBS News. The
Fresh off of his unexpected departure from President Donald Trump's Department of Government Efficiency, Vivek Ramaswamy has set his sights on becoming governor of Ohio, his home state.
That roped Senate Budget Committee Chairman Lindsay Graham into the heated back and forth, who impressed on Vought that he did not have attorney-client privilege to evade a line of questioning as some of Trump’s other nominees did. “I am not claiming a privilege, Senator,” Vought said.
On his first evening back in office, Trump invited reporters into the Oval Office, where he discussed his new decree that NATO members must spend 5 percent of their nation’s wea
Aides spent months drafting executive orders that allowed Trump to rapidly set the political agenda, leaving his many enemies in disarray
CLEVELAND, Ohio - Less than two years after Ohio voters approved recreational marijuana, Republican legislators are looking to tighten the rules. We’re talking about plants and sharing pot on Today in Ohio.