GOP Sen. Southworth said Trump “is not a normal” Republican, but he’s the “best and possibly the only person who can be president right now.”
Donald Trump has rather awkwardly been denied getting his own way by the Republican Party he represents - twice in the space of one week. The US President-elect is looking ahead to his inauguration next year,
In addition to voting in the presidential contest between Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris, voters in Kentucky will cast ballots for the state’s six congressional districts.
While the trial proved popular at first, approval ratings dropped by 1974, with one of the main complaints being the lack of sunlight on winter mornings, according to the Smithsonian Magazine. In October of that year, President Gerald Ford signed a bill that ended permanent daylight saving time, cutting the trial period short.
The rebels are largely the most conservative lawmakers who are passionate about slashing spending and debt. They hail from deep-red districts where a primary challenge is less of a danger.
In a recent interview, outgoing Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell teed off on Trump’s “America First” movement and made reference to its fascist roots.
We didn’t have the votes to pass it last year. After the election results? I don’t see that changing,” Thayer says of exceptions to Kentucky’s abortion ban.
The Kentucky senator said the world was in a "very dangerous place" while speaking out against Trump's "America First" policy.
More and more Republicans seem to be openly embracing Elon Musk with some even referring to him as ‘our prime minister.’ This, even as President-elect Donald Trump is rejecting the notion that the world’s richest man is in charge.
Northern Kentucky U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie, a Republican, is signaling a move to dislodge Speaker Mike Johnson over spending promises.
Timoney views his “no” votes on two anti-transgender bills as costing him his House seat. But, “I took those stances for a reason, and I don’t regret them one bit.”
President-elect Donald Trump delivered a likely death blow to bipartisan congressional budget negotiations on Wednesday, rejecting the measure as full of giveaways to Democrats after billionaire ally Elon Musk whipped up outrage toward the bill and cheered on Republican lawmakers who announced their opposition.