Opinion: Jill Biden’s prophesy After a jury convicted former President Donald Trump of 34 felony counts, the real test of his fate will be November’s election. First lady Jill Biden describes it as a choice between good and evil, ... 06/2/2024 - 1:07 am | View Link
Majority of incoming Texas House Republicans calls for end to Democratic committee chairs, narrowing path for Phelan House Speaker Dade Phelan has stuck to the tradition of appointing chairs from the opposing party, drawing fierce pushback from the GOP’s right wing. 05/31/2024 - 12:38 pm | View Link
Committee Puts $240k Behind Moderate Republicans in Legislative Primaries A political action committee with a mix of national and state money has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on mailers intended to sway voters in a series of bitterly contested Republican ... 05/31/2024 - 11:29 am | View Link
Trump found guilty on all 34 counts in hush money trial NEW YORK - Jurors in former President Donald Trump's hush money trial have reached a verdict. The jurors have requested an additional 30 minutes to fill out a form. This is a breaking news story. Stay ... 05/30/2024 - 2:31 pm | View Link
How Republicans in Key Senate Races Are Flip-Flopping on Abortion Several G.O.P. Senate candidates used to embrace anti-abortion views. Now they are shifting their positions on an issue that has become an electoral liability for their party. 05/30/2024 - 8:47 am | View Link
Following former President Trump’s first criminal conviction—and his rambling against the outcome—he’s claiming that the possibility of being sentenced to house arrest or jail time doesn’t bother him.
“I’m okay with it,” Trump said on Fox & Friends Weekend, in his first interview since a dozen jurors handed down guilty verdicts on 34 of 34 felony charges for falsifying business records on Thursday.
The Fox & Friends hosts said they spent 90 minutes interviewing the former president at his Bedminster, New Jersey estate.
Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff tells CNN's Kasie Hunt that "they should recommend a sentence no greater or no less than any other citizen would get for committing those kinds of crimes."
GOP Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), who previously called January 6 rioters “insurrectionists” who “should face the full extent of federal law,” is now singing a different tune: Many of those insurrectionists, he believes, should be “considered” for, and receive, presidential pardons.
On NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday, Cotton said people “who did not attack a law enforcement officer, [and] who did not damage public property ” on Jan.
GRANBY — Few physical reminders remain in this unassuming mountain town 20 years after a rampage by an aggrieved muffler shop owner attracted worldwide attention.
Marvin Heemeyer — convinced he’d been wronged by town leaders — plotted for more than a year, crafting and installing a 40,000-pound steel and concrete enclosure atop a bulldozer.