Trump, tariffs and economic
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Merz, Trump and German
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Harvard is deploying the classic Washington weapon of lobbying finesse in order to navigate its battle with Trump.
The beginning of June marks the start of the traditional monthlong ruling season at the Supreme Court, when the justices hand down decisions in their biggest and most contentious cases.
The president is set to raise tariffs on steel and aluminum this week, even as the courts are challenging the legitimacy of other levies.
President Trump said that Elon Musk "will, always, be with us, helping all the way." Musk's tenure as a "special government employee" is formally ending.
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The cost to repair Washington, D.C., streets after the upcoming military parade celebrating the Armyâs 250th anniversary could cost as much as $16 million, according to U.S. military officials.
Autonomy on Judge Picks: President Trump appears to be declaring independence from outside constraints on how he nominates judges, signaling that he is looking for loyalists who will uphold his agenda and denouncing the conservative legal network that helped him remake the federal judiciary in his first term.
During his brief stint in the Trump administration, the billionaire left a big mark on the government with his DOGE agency.
The U.K. will build new nuclear-powered attack submarines and create an army ready to fight a war in Europe as part of a boost to military spending
The Alaska Republican senator has no qualms about criticizing the president. She could play a make-or-break role in pushing back on the legislation carrying his agenda.
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The move comes after the president dispatched Vice President JD Vance to âremove improper ideologyâ from Smithsonian museums.
China has pushed back against President Trumpâs accusation that it broke a trade truce reached just weeks earlier, as a re-escalation of tensions dim hopes of a resolution.Beijing has acted responsibly and upheld the consensus reached at the economic and trade talks in Geneva,