Even as handicappers adjudged Pete Hegseth ’s confirmation as secretary of Defense to be all but certain, not one but two Republican senators indicated a hard pass on the poorly qualified bad boy from Fox News.
U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito and U.S. Sen. Jim Justice voted Monday in favor of a bill to place strict penalties on illegal immigrants who commit crimes in the U.S. and to approve President Donald Trump’s nominee for Secretary of State.
Sen. Jim Justice (R-W.Va.) was officially sworn into his seat Tuesday, putting Republicans closer to having their full 53-member majority.  Justice was sworn in by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa),
Trump ordered an immediate pause to the disbursement of federal funds tied to certain components of the Inflation Reduction Act and the bipartisan infrastructure law.
Jim Justice has now been sworn in to the U.S. Senate. Most other senators were sworn in more than a week ago, Jan. 3. But Justice remained in his role as governor until his successor, Patrick Morrisey, was sworn in Monday.
President Donald Trump answered questions at a press availability on a range of topics following a White House meeting with top congressional Republicans.
During their first news conference since Trump took office, House Republican leaders were effusive about the new administration and noted there is a lot of "anxious anticipation" about what they're going to do with their new trifecta. "We will deliver," Johnson pledged.
Republicans duck Trump’s claims that Ukraine should have surrendered to Russia - ‘I hadn’t heard that,’ one Republican insisted about Trump’s claims in Hannity interview
Former U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm opened a warning cry of an op-ed published Thursday in The New York Times with a look inside West Virginia. Granholm recalled a May 2023 trip to Weirton,
Videos from Jan. 6, 2021, show D.C. Metropolitan Police Officer Michael Fanone defending the nation’s Capitol, which was under siege by a wild, unruly and – as it turned out
At the White House, President Donald Trump said he was surprised that two senators have publicly said they'll vote against his nominee to lead the Defense Department.
Trump’s blitz of executive actions align with many of the ideas promoted in a conservative policy blueprint he once distanced himself from.