Many Americans are paying credit-card interest rates over 20%, but a new bill from a bipartisan duo would slice their card costs in half with a temporary rate cap of 10%.
The Vermont office of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., received a letter Wednesday containing an “unidentified substance,” according to a release from the senator. The office followed “standard procedure,” and government authorities eventually identified it as a “harmless powder,” according to the release.
A quirk in the website OpenSecrets has given RFK Jr. a chance to misleadingly portray Sen. Bernie Sanders as receiving big money from big Pharma.
The Vermont independent has demanded agency heads provide information on the early resignation program, casting it as part of a Trump power grab.
The Vermont HAZMAT team later determined that the powder substance was not hazardous, and there was no threat to the office.
As of Tuesday, traders on the event-based trading platform Polymarket are able to purchase a “yes” share in Gabbard’s confirmation market for 98 cents, implying a 98% chance she will be confirmed. Bettors have staked more than $4.5 million on the vote.
Sen. Bernie Sanders argued that "the conspiracy theories" that Robert F. Kennedy has entertained are "not unlike what we're hearing all over the Trump administration."
Robert F. Kennedy attempted Thursday to score a cheap political point against Senator Bernie Sanders by accusing the independent Vermont lawmaker of being bought out by the pharmaceutical industry—but he got his facts wrong.
Many Americans are paying credit-card interest rates over 20%, but a new bill from a bipartisan duo would slice their card costs in half with a temporary rate cap of 10%.
Below is a condensed transcript of that exchange, in which Kennedy and Sanders spoke over each other and repeated themselves: KENNEDY: Bernie, the problem of corruption is not jus
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders questioned Health Secretary nominee RFK Jr. on vaccine stance, calling responses "troubling" and "problematic."