House Speaker Mike Johnson said he isn't worried about facing the same fate as Rep. Kevin McCarthy if his two-step stopgap measure passes and stops the government from shutting down this week.
The Justice Department announced Tuesday that it has charged two people with threatening federal judges this month, including a Florida woman who said she would kill the judge overseeing the case on the abortion pill.
House Speaker Mike Johnson endorsed Donald Trump for president on Tuesday, a move that was a symbolic departure from his ousted predecessor leading the House.
Illegal immigration ticked down in October, though it was still the second-worst month on record, with Homeland Security recording 309,221 encounters with unauthorized migrants.
The government in Finland is considering whether to close some crossing points on the country's long border with Russia to prevent people from trying to enter without proper documentation, the Nordic nation's interior minister and prime minister said Tuesday.
Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT) claims to be a Republican. The senator from Montana is supposed to be a conservative. As such, his values are supposed to align with our nation’s founding principles and ones that run counter to the current generation’s shift toward prioritizing hedonistic pursuits. Conservatives are supposed to be the good guys, the defenders of morality and individual responsibility in society, and live by a code that helps improve the lives of their fellow citizens, not enable those people to get addicted to a dangerous drug.
There is no reason California shouldn’t be able to repair and reopen Interstate 10 in Los Angeles in a timely matter, especially when other states have been able to finish similar projects quickly in the past two years.
For years, liberals, Democrats, and other left-wing politicos emphasized the importance, nay, the necessity, of having equal representation in society. Time and time again, Democrats emphasized that black people must be elected to positions of power so black citizens could see elected leaders that “look like them.” However, when it came to potentially electing Kentucky’s first black governor, these very same people said no. Just like that, diversity and racial representation no longer mattered when it came to Kentucky’s election for governor.