GOP, Democrats and Texas
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Inside House GOP’s Epstein meltdown
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President Donald Trump is not done re-litigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol. And neither are his allies on Capitol Hill.
After the Trump administration approved the $8 billion Paramount–Skydance merger, Joe Scarborough warned that Republicans may come to regret the precedent being set. The Morning Joe panel discusses the potential long-term consequences.
The legislature is meeting in special session to draft plans that could give the party five more seats in Congress.
Lawmakers such as U.S. Rep. Katherine Clark are promising to use the summer to spotlight GOP inaction on Epstein and fight President Donald Trump’s controversial ‘Big Ugly Bill,’ warning that hardworking families will pay the price.
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American voters favor Republicans on national security and immigration while preferring Democrats on other key national issues.
Republicans are furious with the attorney general’s handling of the Epstein files, which has consumed Washington for weeks.
Republicans have proposed selling millions of acres of public land to build housing, but it won't help the Northeast, where the supply gap is most severe.
Former Biden chief of staff Ronald Klain appears before House investigators probing whether White House aides concealed signs of Biden's mental decline.
The White House is focusing on redistricting efforts beyond Texas to help Republicans maintain control of the U.S. House in 2026
“The video is gross, but it also suggests that Trump is worried the walls may be closing in,” Steele wrote. “Facing a debacle over the Epstein files, Trump is throwing red meat at his base, falsely claiming that Obama may have falsified the records, even though they date back to 2019, long after he left office.”
Republicans might unwittingly undermine the growing popularity of a first-term Trump policy that encourages Obamacare sign-ups.
Fla., discusses what's next for the investigation into former President Biden's mental acuity after former White House chief of staff Ron Klain spent hours answering questions on Capitol Hill Thursday.