Senate Democrats are mulling over whether to support the House GOP-backed government funding bill or own the consequences for causing a partial government shutdown.
Independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said during a Tuesday interview that President Donald Trump, Elon Musk and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos have created the most frightening time period in ...
CNN senior political commentator Scott Jennings sparred with his fellow panelists Monday night as he defended President Donald Trump's administration for detaining a noncitizen on a student visa who supported ...
Former Vice President Kamala Harris on Sunday invoked her appreciation for Doritos while inarticulately discussing "innovation" at an artificial intelligence (AI) conference
Vice President J.D. Vance called out hecklers who shouted at him for pointing out the negative consequences illegal immigration has on Americans' livelihoods during his Monday speech at the National ...
Justice Department official Leo Terrell told Fox News host Harris Faulkner Monday the Trump administration would be reading "the riot act" to ten major universities over pro-Hamas protests.
Former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany scoffed Monday at Democratic Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries' claim that Republicans are "on the run" over high prices that began to soar during ...
Fox News legal analyst Gregg Jarrett lit into the Supreme Court Monday, saying they allowed a federal judge to become a “super-president” and costing the country $2 billion.
Republican New York Rep. Nicole Malliotakis accused CNN anchor Kate Bolduan of trying to pin economic problems on President Donald Trump despite his administration being in its early stages.
House Republican leadership unveiled bill text Saturday to fund the government through September and avert a partial government shutdown set to occur after midnight on March 14.
"The Democrats threw in this outrageous requirement, the stipulation, hey, we won’t fund the government unless you tie the hands of the executive branch."
Democratic Texas Rep. Al Green suggested on Friday that the House of Representatives censuring him for disrupting President Donald Trump's congressional address was rooted in racial "discrimination."