Former president Donald Trump addressed the media after being told he will
Ex-president faces 88 felony counts across four prosecutions as he campaigns for the presidency
Donald Trump's first criminal trial is set to begin Monday. Tim O’Brien, the man who wrote the book on the former president, joins The Weekend to preview the historic trial as Trump takes aim at his ex-attorney Michael Cohen and judges despite a gag order.
Former President Donald Trump says each state should follow “the will of the people” and pass state-specific laws on abortion. “My view is now that Read More
Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) said he thinks former president and presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump will experience an increase in support due to his trial in New York, predicting that this trial will “backfire” on the Democrats. The Florida congressman and Trump surrogate pointed to how Trump experienced a new wave of support after he […]
Donald Trump arrived Monday at a New York court for the start of jury selection in his hush-money trial, marking a singular moment in American history as the former president answers to criminal charges that he falsified business records in order to stifle stories about his sex life.
GLEN OWEN: Ever the tease, Farage told the gathering that he would decide 'in the next few weeks' whether he will return to frontline politics before the general election.
NEW YORK (AP) — Donald Trump’s history-making criminal trial is set to start Monday with a simple but extraordinary procedural step that is vital to American democracy. A group of regular citizens — Trump’s peers, in the eyes of the law — will be chosen to decide whether the former president of the United States
Donald Trump’s history-making criminal trial is set to start Monday with a simple but extraordinary procedural step that is vital to American democracy
A New York court will begin selecting jurors Monday to try an ex-president on criminal charges for the first time in U.S. history.
Jenifer Lewis compares Donald Trump to Adolf Hitler while unloading on the upcoming presidential election.
WASHINGTON — Sen. Lindsey Graham sparred with Donald Trump on Monday after the former president attacked Graham, R-S.C., for pushing his bill to outlaw abortion across the U.S. after 15 weeks of pregnancy. While Trump said the issue should be left to states, Graham vowed to keep pressing for federal limits. “I think we should draw a line,” Graham told reporters. “We know that the Dobbs decision did not say that there’s no federal role. There are three laws on the books at the federal level. So...