Trump, Musk and Washington
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Trump, Tariff and Trade Court
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Senate Republicans have promised a dramatic rewrite of the massive domestic policy bill, which includes a proposed 10-year ban on state and local government regulation of artificial intelligence, that recently passed the House.
President Donald Trump’s tariffs can continue for now, after an appeals court granted the administration’ request to temporarily stay a lower court’s order.
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Mediaite on MSNHouse Republican Introduces Bill to Block Washington Rail Project Unless It’s Called the ‘Trump Train’Rep. Greg Steube (R-FL) wants the Washington, D.C. subway system to be renamed to honor President Donald Trump. The post House Republican Introduces Bill to Block Washington Rail Project Unless It’s Called the ‘Trump Train’ first appeared on Mediaite.
"Article One Section Eight gives Congress the power over taxes and tariffs. The Constitution is clear," Bacon, a rare Republican critic of Trump, posted to X. Another X user replied to say the 1934 Reciprocal Tariff Act delegated that power to the president when there is a national emergency.
By Kevin Buckland TOKYO (Reuters) -Stocks slipped in Asia on Friday and the U.S. dollar drooped with Treasury yields as investors digested an appeals court decision to keep President Donald Trump's tariffs in effect,
Elon Musk’s time as head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is drawing to a close, but the national debt and runaway spending remain virtually unchanged despite the incessant media coverage of the cost-cutting effort.
President Donald Trump is planning to ramp up weapons sales to Taiwan to a level exceeding the pace set during his first term, Reuters reported, a move that risks escalating military tensions with China at a time the two nations are already locked in difficult talks over tariffs.
In a recent pair of focus groups, voters loyal to President Trump judged members of Congress almost entirely according to whether they backed him.
George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley said Thursday on “The Ingraham Angle” that President Donald Trump has the authority to hit other countries with reciprocal tariffs. A three-judge panel on the New York-based Court of International Trade ruled Wednesday that the president could not use his executive powers to impose reciprocal tariffs on imports.