A s the reality of President-elect Donald Trump’s victory begins to settle, LGBTQ+ rights groups and individuals are grappling with the realities of what that means—especially now that he has a GOP-majority Senate to back him on his policies.
Donald Trump can claim a lot out of his 2024 election win. What Trump cannot claim is a landslide victory, although that’s how he will describe it.
During his campaign, Trump promised that “you’re going to have peace in the Middle East,” while telling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “do what you have to do.”
A prison sentence would be a headache for the president-elect, but he wouldn’t have to worry about serving any time until after leaving office—if at all.
Trump, the president-elect, made inroads in heavily Puerto Rican areas of eastern Pennsylvania where the vice president spent the last full day of her campaign. Trump turned South Texas' Rio Grande Valley, a decadeslong Democratic stronghold populated both by newer immigrants and Tejanos who trace their roots in the state for several generations.
With Republicans taking control of the Senate, many of President-elect Trump's Cabinet nominees are likely to face an easy path to confirmation, even some who may be controversial. Here are some of the possible people Trump is considering or has chosen for ...
With Donald Trump headed back to the White House, he has a few months to build his next adminsitration. He has picked his chief of staff, who is next?
President Joe Biden and President-elect Donald Trump will meet Wednesday in the Oval Office. That word comes Saturday from the White House.
Fed up with high prices and unimpressed with an economy that by just about any measure is a healthy one, Americans demanded change when they voted for president.
The tech mogul, who campaigned for Trump, did not participate in substantive parts of the conversation, according to a source familiar with the matter.