Jan 6 subpoenas against Trump aides would be revoked under new bill
More than two dozen House Republicans are backing a push to revoke subpoenas sent to former President Trump aides by the now-defunct House select committee on Jan. 6.
More than two dozen House Republicans are backing a push to revoke subpoenas sent to former President Trump aides by the now-defunct House select committee on Jan. 6.
Detroit — Four years after Detroit’s convention center was the center of conspiracy theories and unfounded allegations of voter fraud, thousands of Republicans were back in the building last weekend to prepare for November’s rematch between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. So-called election integrity efforts and disproven allegations of voter fraud were repeatedly invoked, this
Rep. Colin Allred, the Democrat nominee for Senate in Texas, has a long history of questioning election legitimacy despite attacking his GOP opponent, Sen. Ted Cruz, over the issue.
The White House reportedly canceled a meeting with Israeli officials the day after Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu called out the Biden administration for the “inconceivable” decision to withhold munitions from Israel. Senior U.S. and Israeli officials were set to meet at the White House on Thursday to discuss Iran’s nuclear capabilities. But that changed after
George W. Cook III served as the top legislative aide to Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D., Mich.) while she pushed a historic billion-dollar funding package that has largely been leveraged for electric vehicle projects. Now, according to state filings reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon, Cook is a senior lobbyist for General Motors, the Detroit-based automaker that
Mike Pence's organization is pushing Republican leaders in Congress to stop an amendment to expand draft eligibility to women from being passed in the final version of the NDAA.
Former President Trump's campaign responded to the latest attack ad from President Biden for focusing on an issue it says is "irrelevant" to most Americans.