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The president reportedly made a “profanity-laced” call to the vulnerable Republican senator on Thursday, sources told The Hill. Collins was one of five GOP senators to join Democrats in advancing a resolution on the War Powers Act from committee to the floor, which passed in a 52-47 vote earlier in the day.
DEC's previously scheduled Michigan Economic Outlook meeting program, according to a news release from the DEC. The Detroit Economic Club is a nonpartisan group and has hosted senior government officials and political leaders,
And in fact, CNN’s Annie Grayer reported Friday on how Trump’s threats after the Senate war powers vote actually dissuaded some House Republicans from voting to override Trump’s vetoes. Clearly, Trump’s wrath still matters.
This article is by F. Brinley Bruton reporting from Bogotá, Colombia, and a Caracas-based reporter who is not being identified because of safety concerns
Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s apparent attempt to pass a note under the radar was foiled by President Donald Trump immediately reading it out loud.
Venezuela’s release of “large numbers of political prisoners” is “a very important and smart gesture,” the president said in another one of his self-soothing sessions on his platform Truth Social very early on Friday morning.
The American Bankers Association panned the proposal, saying it would "drive consumers toward less regulated, more costly alternatives."
U.S. President Donald Trump posted a chart on his social media account late on Thursday that included job-market data that was not publicly released until Friday morning, a break with long-standing practice the White House said was inadvertent.
President Donald Trump reportedly told The New York Times that his "own morality" serves as the thing that could potentially limit his global powers -- adding that he doesn't "need international law."
President Donald Trump discussed his plans to expand operations against drug cartels and touted his takedown of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro on "Hannity."
The fate of the majority of President Donald Trump’s tariffs is in the hands of the US Supreme Court, which could rule as soon as Jan. 9 on the legality of the sweeping levies. Lower courts ruled in 2025 that the tariffs were issued illegally,
The president made the remarks at a meeting with heads of oil and gas majors at the White House concerning the future of Venezuela and the US plans to "run" the South American country.
The Trump administration in its first year has claimed sweeping executive power and tested U.S. laws. Federal judges warn that American jurisprudence and democracy are under threat.