US senators slam Trump’s Russia-Ukraine peace plan
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WASHINGTON—The House voted unanimously Wednesday evening to repeal a controversial Senate-crafted provision that could grant some GOP senators at least $500,000 each in taxpayer-funded damages, after the provision prompted bipartisan outrage.
23hon MSN
Senators want answers from Coast Guard on how it probes displays of swastikas or other hate symbols
Two senators who lead a bipartisan antisemitism task force say they want more information from the U.S. Coast Guard about its policy regarding displays of swastikas, nooses or other hate symbols
U.S. senators critical of President Trump's approach to ending the Russia-Ukraine war said Saturday they spoke with Secretary of State Marco Rubio who told them that the peace plan Mr. Trump is pushing Kyiv to accept is a "wish list" of the Russians and ...
Utah, want to hold social media companies accountable for the negative impacts their algorithms have on people. They spoke to NPR about their bill.
The House has voted to repeal part of a new law that lets senators sue the federal government for millions of dollars if their personal or office data is accessed without their knowledge
The House voted unanimously Wednesday night to repeal a provision that Congress passed last week that allows senators to sue the federal government for seizing their phone records — but the repeal effort faces an uncertain future in the Senate.
Several Republican senators are chastising Donald Trump over his call to execute political enemies, even as the wider party appears content to shrug off the president’s death threats. Trump, 79, flew off the handle in a series of menacing Truth Social posts Thursday,
Sen. Lindsey Graham blocked a Democrat-led effort to approve a House-passed measure to repeal a controversial provision that allows senators to sue for $500,000 if federal investigators search their phone records without their knowledge.