Will the Senate GOP confirm controversial picks like Tulsi Gabbard and RFK Jr.? Here’s the hearings schedule and list of who’s been confirmed.
The Senate is holding hearings and voting on President Donald Trump’s Cabinet picks. Here’s which earned the most bipartisan support.
A slate of congressional hopefuls are vying to win their Florida primaries in special elections to replace two high-profile House Republicans.
With each announcement of a Cabinet nominee, Trump moved closer to assembling a team of advisers with a long history of opposition to policies that support Black Americans.
Bondi was tapped for the role after Mr. Trump's first pick for attorney general, former Rep. Matt Gaetz, withdrew following ... Senate-confirmed openly gay Cabinet member of a Republican ...
President Donald Trump is working to fill ... That’s despite an early speed bump in Trump’s process when former Rep. Matt Gaetz withdrew his name for the role of attorney general.
President Donald Trump’s ... former U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, withdrew his name for consideration amid allegations of sexual misconduct, Trump tapped Bondi, a former Florida attorney ...
The Trump administration’s purge of dozens of senior officials at the U.S. Agency for International Development encountered resistance Thursday when the career employee who carried out the original directive rescinded it, calling the purge an “illegal” violation of “due process.”
President Trump’s most controversial Cabinet nominees have flooded the zone Thursday in back-to-back-to-back confirmation hearings.
Tulsi Gabbard, Kash Patel, and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., bobbed and weaved around senators’ questions, but their own words came back to bite them.
Gabbard replied that she had only meant to highlight the “egregiously illegal and unconstitutional programs” that Snowden had exposed—specifically NSA programs that intercepted communications of U.S. citizens—and that his leaks had led to “serious reforms.”
Three of President Donald Trump’s most controversial nominees faced sharp questions in the Senate during hearings Thursday from Democrats as well as several Republican senators in what amounted to the most direct skepticism from GOP senators over Trump’s nominees to date.