President Donald Trump answered questions at a press availability on a range of topics following a White House meeting with top congressional Republicans.
Every major U.S. medical group, including the American Medical Association, has opposed the bans and said gender-affirming treatments can be medically necessary and are supported by evidence. Doctors, parents and young people have said such care reduces depression and suicidal thoughts in transgender youths.
The Fraternal Order of Police union said those who assaulted officers during the 2021 Capitol riot should serve their full sentences.
While Trump is a dominant political force among evangelical and conservative Christians, he has faced criticism from the Pope, the former Archbishop of Canterbury in the U.K. and progressive mainline protestants in the U.S over a range of issues.
Just hours after being sworn in, Trump pardoned more than 1,500 people charged with crimes in connection to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Trump had repeatedly vowed to pardon the rioters who stormed the Capitol that day throughout his campaign, despite some of them being convicted of assaulting a police officer.
President Donald Trump revoked a 1965 civil rights executive order Tuesday, rolling back authorities long used to prevent employment discrimination by federal contractors, subcontractors and grant recipients. He also ordered agencies to plan potential civil rights investigations against private sector entities who embrace diversity hiring.
The House of Representatives has passed the Laken Riley Act again and is sending it to President Donald Trump's desk.
The name of Martin, a board member of a group that portrayed Jan. 6 defendants as victims of political persecution, was on motions filed this week to dismiss cases that
WPTV Reporter Michael Hoffman spoke with Florida GOP Chair Evan Power on what President Trump would have to do in order to officially make the change on birthright citizenship
The situation previews a series of looming clashes between Trump’s personal interests and lawmakers’ professed principles.
The Trump administration plans to prosecute state and local officials who resist federal immigration laws, according to a leaked Justice Department memo.