Secret Service report details failures that led to Trump rally attack in Pennsylvania

Secret Service report details failures that led to Trump rally attack in Pennsylvania – CBS News Watch CBS News In a rare unanimous vote, the House passed a bill Friday that would bolster Secret Service protection for both presidential and vice presidential candidates. The vote came as the acting director of the Secret Service said

Harris speaks about abortion in Georgia, highlighting deaths of two Georgia women

Atlanta – Vice President Kamala Harris‘ visit to Georgia Friday is centered around one thing: women’s reproductive rights. The visit by Harris follows ProPublica’s investigation into two women who recently died in the state. It found their deaths could have been prevented, but their medical care was hindered by Georgia’s six-week abortion ban. Harris highlighted

Johnson says Trump “understands the situation” as shutdown nears

Washington — House Speaker Mike Johnson signaled that former President Donald Trump could soften on his calls to shut down the federal government if a measure requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote is not attached to a short-term spending bill.  Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, met with Trump on Thursday as the House leader

Secret Service identifies failures that preceded July 13 Trump attack

Washington — A Secret Service assessment of the failures that led to the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally on July 13 found that there were multiple communications issues with law enforcement at the site, the agency’s interim leader said Friday. Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe detailed to reporters

Golf: The presidential pastime that’s a nightmare for the Secret Service

Before President William Howard Taft ever stepped on a golf course as commander-in-chief, he was cautioned by his predecessor to avoid the sport altogether.  “I have received hundreds of letters protesting it,” then-President Theodore Roosevelt wrote to Taft, who was his secretary of war. Roosevelt warned that photo-ops of political leaders’ leisure-time activities could damage