Congress to Take Up First War Powers Vote Since Iran Strikes - TIME
The Senate will vote on Wednesday on a measure to block Trump from ordering further military strikes on Iran.
Legal challenges, public protests, investigative reporting, legislative pushback, and grassroots organizing aimed at holding the administration accountable.
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The Senate will vote on Wednesday on a measure to block Trump from ordering further military strikes on Iran.
The U.S. Senate is headed toward a vote Wednesday on President Donald Trump's decision to embark on a war against Iran, an extraordinary test in Congress for a conflict that has rapidly spread across the Middle East with no clear U.S. exit strategy.
The measure, which would block President Trump from further military force against Iran, appears poised to fall short of the simple majority needed to advance in the Senate.
Noem was grilled over her comments after the two deadly shootings in Minneapolis by Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who called for her to resign.
The United States ruling class has chosen the road of mass violence—and there is now likely no turning back. According to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, under Donald Trump, the US military has launched more military strikes against more countries than it has under any other president
Kristi Noem faces House Democrats in heated Capitol Hill hearing after bipartisan Senate clash over ICE operations and immigration enforcement policies.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is testifying before the House Judiciary Committee. Follow live updates.
Four Minnesota Republican legislators have asked Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to limit ICE activity near schools, following a period of ramped-up enforcement that pushed many students to shift to online learning.
Permissive and political. Helmer's bill does not ban schools from teaching about Jan. 6. Instead, it requires a specific framing and bars presenting ...
... Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (RFK Jr.). | Photo: Denis Balibouse.
The group, established as a check on perceived politicization of its federal counterpart by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., includes scientists who previously served on the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee. Both panels are set to meet March 19.
In the final analysis, the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision on tariffs may not matter at all. “An unfortunate ruling,” President Donald Trump said in his televised State of the Union address, “But the…