Trump, crypto and black tie dinner
Digest more
Trump, Harvard and International Student
Digest more
Trump's Harvard visa threat could wipe out several of the school's sports teams - Some of Harvard’s sports teams would be virtually wiped out by a Trump administration decision that would make the Ivy
President Donald Trump’s abrupt firing of top officials at the Library of Congress and equally sudden attempt to appoint a slate of loyalists as replacements has morphed into an enormous fight over the separation of powers.
Given the circumstances surrounding Donald Trump’s lawsuit against 60 Minutes and how the news division is apparently under pressure to temper its criticism of the current administration, it seems hard to believe that just a few years ago,
White House officials have argued the dinner poses no conflict of interest because the president's assets are in a blind trust managed by his adult sons.
The Trump Administration is threatening pull federal funding from colleges who don't make the changes it demands.
1d
Mediaite on MSN‘It’s Donald Trump Literally Yelling at Them’: Congressman Describes How the President Whips House Republicans Into LineRep. Brendan Boyle painted quite the picture of how President Donald Trump whips votes in the House of Representatives. The post ‘It’s Donald Trump Literally Yelling at Them’: Congressman Describes How the President Whips House Republicans Into Line first appeared on Mediaite.
Marco Rubio was grilled in the Senate about Trump’s foreign policy. Trump wants to use foreign aid funds to return migrants to conflict areas. Who? Ukrainians, Haitians and others who fled to the U.S. amid extreme, ongoing violence in their home nations. The plan would spend up to $250 million of foreign aid funds.
Trump says ‘Putin not ready to end war’ while Zelensky vows Kursk fight continues - Putin yesterday staged his first visit to Kursk since Russia claimed it expelled all Ukrainian forces from the regio
2don MSNOpinion
Neil Young, one of Donald Trump’s most vocal critics in the music industry, weighed in on the president’s online fight with Bruce Springsteen and other musicians this week, thanking Springsteen for speaking up while encouraging the world’s most powerful person to focus on more pressing issues at hand than what recording artists say about him.
3d
Raw Story on MSN'Window that Trump came crashing through' was opened by civil rights fight: analystFormer President Lyndon Johnson in many ways stood for the antithesis of what President Donald Trump does today, backing the expansion of civil rights, social assistance, and immigration — some of which Trump is directly undoing.
One Republican gubernatorial hopeful in Mississippi who frequently praises President Donald Trump may still find himself up against the president's political operation in the upcoming GOP primary race.