Trump, Scotland and Washington
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Epstein, Trump
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1don MSN
Trump’s USDA to scatter half its Washington staff to field offices. Critics see a ploy to cut jobs
The U.S. Department of Agriculture plans to move thousands of employees out of Washington, D.C., aiming to save money and bring them closer to farmers and ranchers.
National Park Service employees have flagged several books to remove from their gift shops as part of the Trump administration’s crusade against “corrosive ideology.” A records review conducted by The Washington Post revealed several book titles that have been earmarked to potentially be pulled from park retail stores,
1don MSN
Despite Trump's threat to block new Washington Commanders' stadium, D.C. council announces deal
President Trump said if the Commanders "don't change the name back to the original 'Washington Redskins' … I won't make a deal for them to build a Stadium in Washington."
The president threatened to block a deal for the Washington Commanders’ new stadium if the team did not bow to his demand.
It calls for Attorney General Pam Bondi and multiple other departments to carry out the plan to take care of 275,000 homeless people.
January 6 has become a date of hallowed pagan sacredness to the ruling class - a supposed talisman marking chaos, a shorthand for "threats to democracy." But the media, predictably, has focused on the wrong January.
Washington Attorney General Nick Brown filed a lawsuit on Friday against the Trump administration after millions of dollars in federal funding meant to help shelter migrants in the state were canceled.
Before any ballots were cast, Penn researchers say they correctly predicted Trump’s 2024 victory by analyzing his upbeat rhetoric in the final weeks of the race. A surge in optimism pointed to his
Despite the many national and international challenges he faces, President Donald Trump on Sunday let the world know he had something else on his mind: the name of Washington’s NFL team.
President Donald Trump visited the Federal Reserve headquarters in Washington Thursday, where he publicly scorned Fed chairman Jerome Powell over the costs of a long-planned, roughly $2.5 billion renovation project.