House Republicans rallied to defend former President Donald Trump after the ex-president was indicted by a grand jury in Georgia on charges he conspired to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) and former President Donald Trump are on a collision course as both are vying to be the Republican nominee in the 2024 presidential election. Along the way, there’s been an insufferable level of bickering between the candidates and their supporters. But it doesn’t have to be this way. There’s a really easy solution that could end all of the name-calling and insults. DeSantis and Trump should debate each other face-to-face. More specifically, DeSantis should challenge Trump to do one.
The doomsaying from some Republicans that the party can’t win if former President Donald Trump isn’t the nominee is both a terrible way to run a party and simply wrong.
The most important thing to know whenever you see a headline about “conspiracy” charges is that the prosecutor has weak evidence and is trying to take a shortcut to conviction. Just ask Justice Robert Jackson, who wrote in 1949:
MILWAUKEE, Wis. – President Biden on Tuesday traveled to a manufacturing warehouse in Wisconsin to tout one of his signature legislative achievements, a reflection of how the White House is betting that Americans will favor their focus on kitchen table issues as the frontrunner for the GOP presidential nomination is once again mired in legal...
Welcome to The Hill's Campaign newsletter {beacon} Campaign Report Campaign Report The Big Story Trump's legal woes mount ahead of 2024 Former President Trump was hit with his fourth indictment late Monday after Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis charged him and 18 others for their efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia. ...
Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) accused the trustees of her late husband’s estate of committing financial abuse against her and called for them to be suspended as administrators of the account in a recent legal filing. Feinstein, 90, accused the three trustees — Michael Klein, Marc Scholvinck, and Verett Mims — of the Richard C. Blum...
Federal officials announced on Tuesday that they would be easing up on Colorado River usage cutbacks in 2024, thanks to an unusually wet winter combined with system-wide conservation measures. Water releases from Lake Mead — the Colorado River Basin’s largest reservoir — in 2023 are expected to be the lowest in three decades, according to the Bureau...