Joarder, a rare Republican touting the endorsement of at least one left-leaning Muslim group, takes issue with one opponent in the primary in particular, state Sen. Randy Fine, who he calls a “genocidal Jew” on X in reference to the Brevard County Republican’s staunch defense of Israel and American Jews facing anti-semitism.
More of President-elect Trump's picks for key Cabinet positions faced questions from senators on Capitol Hill in another mammoth day of confirmation hearings. Lisa Desjardins reports.
Trump has chosen people who understand the threat of government coercion—because they have experienced it firsthand.
Tobin Harshaw is a Bloomberg Opinion senior editor and columnist on national security and military affairs. Previously, he was deputy editor at the op-ed page of the New York Times and the newspaper’s letters editor.
President-elect Donald J. Trump has leaned heavily on familiar faces from the cable network as he fills out his second-term cast.
Since launching in 2021, America First Policy Institute has been known colloquially around Washington, D.C., as Donald Trump's "Cabinet in waiting."
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Just in time for tomorrow’s MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. Day, we have an exclusive bit of news from Alex Isenstadt’s forthcoming book, “Revenge: The Inside Story of Trump’s Return to Power” ($30), on a gambit the Trump campaign considered heading into MLK Day 2024.
Moody is unabashedly a legacy-making selection for DeSantis, someone who fiercely defended the governor’s agenda during the last six years and made some of his most headline-grabbing policies possible through her legal actions.
Many of Trump's picks for top jobs in his next administration have not worked at the highest levels of government or in the private sector.
Since launching in 2021, America First Policy Institute has been known colloquially around Washington, D.C., as Donald Trump's "Cabinet in waiting."
Senate hearings are scheduled this coming week for several of Trump's picks for the Cabinet. Many have met with senators individually. Now, they will go before the committees overseeing the agencies that Trump wants them to run. Here's a look at the schedule for Senate hearings set so far, in Eastern time: