On CNN's "Newsroom With Jim Acosta," the host pushes Rep. Tim Burchett to condemn President Trump’s move to pardon Jan. 6 ...
President Trump announced pardons for anti-abortion activists convicted of blockading clinics, asserting their prosecutions ...
That roped Senate Budget Committee Chairman Lindsay Graham into the heated back and forth, who impressed on Vought that he ...
For Trump, presidential pardons are effectively party favors to be handed out to people he likes, agrees with or sees as political allies.
After Jan. 6 pardons, it's worth repeating Rep. John Rutherford's own words from that day: "You cannot say you stand for law ...
President Donald Trump has continued to defend his controversial pardons of the Jan. 6 rioters during a Fox News interview, ...
WASHINGTON (TNND) — President Donald Trump hinted in an interview that aired Wednesday that President Joe Biden could still face prosecution, noting the former president did not issue himself a ...
President Trump’s decision to pardon hundreds of protesters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 — including many accused of assaulting police officers — is dividing House Republicans, with ...
President Trump is sending 1,500 additional troops to the southern border, building off the executive actions he signed on Monday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced to reporters.
For all the Republican talk about "looking forward," the new president and some of his allies appear preoccupied with the retired Democratic president.
Trump said domestic and international challenges over the last four years would not have happened had he been president.
When a party’s leader claims to “back the blue” but pardons or frees those who assaulted police, some party members may feel dissonance. How do they reduce that dissonance?