Ex-Fauci top adviser offers apologies and excuses after COVID email revelations
Amid damning COVID emails, Fauci adviser Morens apologizes but offers few answers in tense congressional hearing.
Amid damning COVID emails, Fauci adviser Morens apologizes but offers few answers in tense congressional hearing.
Washington — As former President Donald Trump’s “hush money” criminal trial in New York proceeds to closing arguments next week, the legal focus is moving south. His attorneys and longtime aide Walt Nauta appeared before Florida federal Judge Aileen Cannon, where they sparred with prosecutors during two contentious, day-long hearings on Wednesday. Nauta was charged
In April, the campaign’s top ally, FF PAC, collected $10 million from Future Forward Action USA. President Joe Biden’s fundraising slowed down somewhat in April, but he is not in danger of losing his cash advantage yet. On May 20, two of the funds associated with President Biden’s reelection campaign issued monthly disclosure statements to
Republican Sens. John Kennedy and Ted Cruz grilled judicial nominee Sarah Netburn over her recommendation that a transgender female inmate be transferred to a female prison.
The bill would give the Commodity Futures Trading Commission primary jurisdiction to regulate the crypto sector. The House on May 22 approved a key bill that would set up a new regulatory framework for cryptocurrency. While the White House has expressed opposition to the legislation, President Joe Biden did not indicate he will veto it. The
Washington — A federal judge in Los Angeles agreed Wednesday to postpone Hunter Biden’s federal criminal trial on tax fraud charges until September. The case was originally scheduled to go to trial on June 20, but Biden’s legal team asked the court for the delay. In court filings, his attorneys argued that a series of
Ohio’s Republican-controlled state Legislature did not reach agreement on legislation that would have adjusted a deadline to give President Biden ballot access. President Joe Biden will not appear on the Ohio general election ballot unless the Democratic party provides a legally acceptable solution, according to Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a Republican. The deadline