Senator Lindsey Graham said Sunday he doesn’t approve of President Trump’s pardons for January 6 defendants who were convicted of violent crimes, particularly those who “beat up cops.” Asked during an appearance on CNN’s State of the Union whether he is okay with the pardons for violent offenders,
Vice President JD Vance's interview with "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" is his first since he assumed the vice presidency.
During the swearing-in, Vance’s wife held the Bible for her husband while she adoringly looked on and balanced their 3-year-old daughter on her hip. J.D. Vance takes the oath of office as Vice ...
Lindsey Graham ... was a mistake,” he said. Graham isn’t the only Trump ally who has struggled with Trump’s pardons for the Jan. 6 rioters. Vice President JD Vance said more than a week ...
Graham claimed he disagreed with the move while ... These clemencies came after Vice President JD Vance assured pardons were coming for those who “protested peacefully” in the days leading ...
The former and current vice president to Trump found themselves under the same roof on Monday, Jan. 20 Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post/Getty; AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson Mike Pence watched his replacement, J.D. Vance, take the oath of office at the ...
Vance took the stage at the March for Life to roaring applause, but just two days later, he launched a public attack on the very Catholic bishops who had welcomed him—revealing deeper tensions between conservative politics and religious leadership.
Instead of compassion, Trump exhibited his classic harshness with distasteful remarks that appeal to the worst of his base, but not the best of America.
Former Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams of Georgia asserted Vice President J.D. Vance was a “DEI graduate” during a Wednesday
Giles will be a key adviser as Senate Republicans look to expand President Donald Trump’s mark on the judiciary even as he inherits far fewer judicial vacancies upon entering office than in his first term.
A federal judge has paused a sweeping new plan from the Trump administration to halt categories of federal spending.
President Trump's priorities of immigration enforcement and promoting U.S. interests in the Panama Canal lead the political agenda in Washington.