Jeffries wants Biden to dole out pardons for people aggressively prosecuted ‘for nonviolent offenses’
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries wants President Joe Biden to pardon people who faced "aggressive prosecutions for nonviolent offenses."
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries wants President Joe Biden to pardon people who faced "aggressive prosecutions for nonviolent offenses."
President Trump's transition team has agreed to allow the FBI to vet incoming cabinet nominees with background checks, they announced Tuesday.
Patel has already had a warmer reception than previous nominees in the upper chamber, though many Republicans still want to research the pick. WASHINGTON—President-elect Donald Trump’s nomination of political ally Kash Patel to head up the FBI sent shockwaves through the capital, but it’s in the Capitol that his fate will be decided. Several Republican
The judge said the case would be terminated when the pardon is received and vacated sentencing in the meantime. A federal judge in California agreed to end a tax case against Hunter Biden, son of President Joe Biden, once the court receives the formal pardon but questioned the president’s claim that his son was unfairly
The judge said the case would be terminated when the pardon is received and vacated sentencing in the meantime. A federal judge in California agreed to end a tax case against President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, once the court receives the formal pardon but questioned the president’s claim that his son was unfairly treated.
Amid a severe budget crisis, the San Francisco Unified School District superintendent decided in March that some schools in the chronically dysfunctional, poorly performing public system needed to close. So it paid a Stanford University professor $30,000 to create an “equity-centered” formula that would determine which ones would shutter. After the results were announced in
Demands made on social media have prompted at least two meetings with world leaders, though it’s unclear what the long-term impact will be, experts say. President-elect Donald Trump began announcing U.S. foreign policy six weeks before his inauguration, a move that some experts say may produce limited results and could violate federal law. The tactic