Jack Ryan’s Mission To Free the Real Estate Market What would possess a man who amassed a small fortune as a pre- and post-IPO partner at the world’s most prestigious investment bank to forgo a typical transition to a life of corporate board sinecures ... 05/4/2024 - 12:07 am | View Link
FLASHBACK: Biden confidante made revealing admission about Obama DOJ in unearthed interview Kaufman was appointed in 2008 to fill the Delaware Senate seat vacated by Biden when he went to the White House to serve as Obama's vice president and the ... White House deputy press secretary Andrew ... 05/2/2024 - 9:00 pm | View Link
New York made Donald Trump and could convict him. But for now, he's using it to campaign Trump, who officially became a Florida resident in 2019, had spent little time in New York after he took office in 2017. He visited only a handful of times as president, and officially decamped to his ... 05/2/2024 - 5:04 pm | View Link
Schumer poised to join Johnson invite for Netanyahu address to Congress Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) is poised to join Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) in inviting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to deliver an address to Congress, despite ... 05/2/2024 - 10:54 am | View Link
Close to 300 ex-Obama-Biden staffers call to suspend military assistance to Israel The group is also asking Biden to call for an immediate cease-fire in Gaza, withdrawal of troops from Gaza and the West Bank. 05/2/2024 - 9:02 am | View Link
Why did SD Governor Kristi Noem decide to publish her story about killing her allegedly 'untrainable' dog? Her state's Senate Minority Leader offers three theories: Inoculation from others telling it; lifting her national profile - and distraction from her governing record.
Without cameras on Hope Hicks' testimony, media outlets were left with only a transcript to analyze why she broke down in tears. "It's a mistake to say Hope Hicks cried because she knew she just ended Donald Trump's career," says Elie Honig, "or she cried because she had just collapsed on cross-examine.
Reproductive rights organizers in two states with near-total abortion bans, Missouri and South Dakota, submitted roughly double the signatures needed to allow ballot measures that would put abortion before voters.
In South Dakota, organizers have submitted 55,000 signatures in support of the ballot measure granting a limited right to abortion—far more than the 35,000 required.