Seth Rogen doesn’t exactly see eye to eye with Ted Cruz.
01.01.2021 - 22:55 / foxnews.com
The Senate voted Friday to override President Trump’s veto of the National Defense Authorization Act in a bipartisan rebuke weeks before he exits the White House.
Several top Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., voted in favor of the override, which passed 81-13.The vote marked the first time in Trump's presidency that one of his vetoes was overturned. Notable senators who voted against the override included Sen.Ted Cruz, R-Texas, Tom Cotton, R-Ark., Bernie
.Seth Rogen doesn’t exactly see eye to eye with Ted Cruz.
Tiger King fans have reacted after it was confirmed that Donald Trump will be not be granting a pardon to Joe Exotic.The outlandish zoo owner was said to be so confident of receiving a pardon that his team reportedly parked a stretch-truck limousine near his prison to transport him to a secure location.Exotic is currently behind bars in Fort Worth Texas, after receiving a 22-year sentence in 2019 for attempting to hire a hitman to kill his bitter rival Carole Baskin, as well as an array of
Private investigator Eric Love, who is part of Joe Exotic’s legal team, said Tuesday evening he was confident the 'Tiger King' star would be receiving a pardon from President Trump before the president's term ends Wednesday. "We will be standing by waiting for President Trump’s confirmation of the Tiger King Joe Exotic," Love said from inside a limousine waiting to pick Exotic up from a Texas prison if he is pardoned and released, KFOR-TV in Oklahoma City reported.
Even in his pathetic last days, Donald Trump found time to take a trip to the Texas border to check on his wall. His journey only confirms the relevance of the new IFC movie, No Man’s Land, which examines some of the human consequences of the divisiveness regarding immigration.
“We don’t think of our history in terms of eras of New York governors, or governors of Oregon, or of Texas,” says Timothy Naftali. “We think of it in terms of the president.
At this rate, the coronavirus is literally never going to go away — and the vaccines our scientists are working so hard to develop won’t matter one bit — because everybody is just going to get sick immediately, anyways.
Several members of the media wrongly went after Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, Wednesday and suggested that he was calling for more "uprisings" following last week's Capitol Hill riot. As the House debated whether to impeach President Trump for a second time, Gohmert took the floor and presented what he hinted was a Democratic double standard.
Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Texas is praising Rep.
Although President Trump "committed an impeachable offense," the House Democrats' articles of impeachment are "flawed," Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, said on Wednesday.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaPresident Donald Trump downplayed attempts to remove him from office nearly a week after a mob of his supporters attacked the U.S.
President Trump on Tuesday will travel to Texas to visit the wall at the southern border, and tout his administration’s accomplishment in building more than 450 miles since he took office – an attempt to move attention away from the controversy related to last week’s riot in the Capitol.
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., called for the expulsion of Sens.
With just over a week remaining in his term, President Trump is expected to celebrate progress on one of his featured campaign promises: a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. According to a senior administration official, Trump will be in Alamo, Texas on Tuesday after the White House marked roughly 450 miles of the barrier being completed.
President Donald Trump is planning one of his final appearances before leaving office.
Senate Democrats are pushing for two of their Republican colleagues to resign following Wednesday’s riot at the U.S. Capitol building, claiming that their roles in challenging the results of November’s election helped to "undermine" democracy.
Millions of President Trump's supporters who had the false hope that the election could be overturned by Congress were "lied to," Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, told "America's Newsroom" Friday.
Sen.Ted Cruz on Thursday defended his decision to challenge the Electoral College certification process, pushing back against some of his colleagues who have accused him of inciting Wednesday's deadly riots at the U.S. Capitol by casting doubt on the 2020 election.