The South Carolina senator pushed for putting border security ahead of tax cuts during a Fox News interview Sunday.
President-elect Donald Trump is willing to wait a few months for Congress to pass “one big, beautiful bill” encompassing the key tenets of his agenda, but whether lawmakers can get it done before his patience runs out is an open question.
The president-elect has already muddied the history of that day, and by pardoning the Capitol rioters, he may be able to rewrite it.
The number of migrants arrested illegally crossing the U.S.-Mexico border in December was lower than when President-elect Donald Trump ended his first term in 2020, according to preliminary figures shared with Reuters,
House and Senate Republicans are split on how to advance Donald Trump’s agenda and hoped the president-elect would give Congress marching orders.
Mollie Hemingway on 'Sunday Morning Futures' discussed President Biden's "failed presidency" and actions he is taking "that could really cause problems coming down the road." MARIA BARTIROMO: I'm back with the editor in chief of The Federalist,
Johnson, a Republican from north Louisiana, is pushing a single bill using a parliamentary maneuver called “budget reconciliation,” challenging the two-bill strategy pursued by a pair of Senate Republicans, Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota, and Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) indicated that he is ready to get all of President-elect Donald Trump’s Cabinet nominees confirmed, citing how the nation is “under attack” while combating illegal immigration.
Knoop is the CEO of Forward Communications and the strategist behind multiple South Carolina campaigns including Governor Henry McMaster’s 2022 race, Attorney General Alan Wilson’s 2018 campaign and Sen. Graham's 2020 campaign that expanded Republican majorities in Congress.
President-elect Trump is officially returning to Washington, set to be inaugurated on Monday for his second term in the White House as the Republican Party trifecta takes form. Congress is set to
The presidential parade after Trump is sworn in will include about 7,500 participants including first responders, veterans groups and school marching bands. First responders from Butler County, Pennsylvania, where Trump survived an assassination attempt, will be among the groups participating.
President Joe Biden looked back at his time in the Oval Office as a period of "hope, progress, and possibility," he said.