Trump, Republican
Digest more
The outcome served as a rare rebuke of leadership and a display of how Democrats could exploit narrow House margins.
Earlier in the day, the Senate advanced a bipartisan measure intended to block the Trump administration from conducting further military action in Venezuela. Five Republicans joined every Democratic senator in advancing the resolution, following the White House’s capture of Venezuela’s president, without explicit permission from Congress.
After five G.O.P. senators joined Democrats on a war powers vote, the president lashed out, including at his party’s most politically endangered senator.
Dozens of Republicans voted with Democrats in favor of overriding two of President Donald Trump's vetoes during his second term in office.
GOP rebels dealt a blow to Speaker Johnson as nine House Republicans joined Democrats to advance an Obamacare subsidy vote despite party leadership opposition.
U.S. Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick accused some of his Republican colleagues of being “intellectually dishonest” about the Affordable Care Act, hours before he and other Republicans broke party lines to pass a bill to restore recently expired healthcare subsidies.
U.S. Rep. Zach Nunn was the only member of Iowa's congressional delegation to support extending the Obamacare subsidies.
SCHENECTADY — Matt Nelligan, the party’s 2023 candidate for mayor, has been picked to be executive director of the Schenectady County Republican Party. He was appointed to the second-in-command leadership post Monday by Liz Joy, chair of the county’s Republicans, who in announcing her choice, lauded Nelligan as tough, smart and loyal.
Scott Jennings was confronted Wednesday over the Republican response to the fatal ICE shooting in Minneapolis.
Many Republicans are downplaying the Trump administration’s threat to use military force to seize Greenland, while some GOP lawmakers denounce what they say would be a senseless attack on a longtime US partner that could splinter the NATO alliance.
Representative Thomas Massie, a rare Republican critic of President Trump’s military intervention, explained his concerns in an interview with The New York Times.