Donald Trump, Mike Johnson and Democrats
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Now, under Johnson's leadership, the House has changed its rules to make it even harder for lawmakers to signal their opposition to Trump's tariffs.
Still licking his wounds after a handful of rogue Republicans forced his and Donald Trump’s hands on Epstein files vote, the House speaker has a plan for handling future petitions
Friction is emerging in the once unified GOP relationship between Speaker Mike Johnson (La.) and Senate Majority Leader John Thune (S.D.). The two congressional leaders have been visibly out of
The House and Senate voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday to require the Justice Department to release its files on the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Cleveland is 2-8 this season and is starting its third quarterback on Sunday (Shedeur Sanders, son of Hall of Famer Deion Sanders). Its coach, Kevin Stefanski, may be trying to save his job. The once-storied franchise has just one playoff victory since the 1994 season and has never even made the Super Bowl.
Speaker Johnson revealed his decision on the House's forthcoming vote on forcing the release of the files on Jeffrey Epstein.
The South Carolina Republican said she will file a privileged resolution to censure the scandal-plagued Congressman.
Johnson said that the Jeffrey Epstein files discharge petition would "carelessly dump thousands of documents without proper protections for the innocent."
Mike Johnson’s tactics worked in the government shutdown. He and Steve Scalise face big challenges ahead, however.
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said that Senate Majority Leader John Thune’s (R-S.D.) assertion that a bill to expand Russian sanctions would start in the House came as a surprise to him, countering