Bill Clinton says he’s open to talking to Biden about preemptive pardon for Hillary Clinton Former President Clinton said he is open to having a conversation with President Biden about a potential preemptive pardon for his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Bill Clinton ... 12/11/2024 - 6:52 am | View Link
Why it’s now impossible to argue that Trump’s 2016 win was a fluke A couple of weeks ago, Hillary Clinton offered a rather pointed response ... After Donald Trump’s victory in 2016, I comforted myself with an argument that certainly seemed true. 11/6/2024 - 1:57 am | View Link
Hillary Clinton Gives Harsh Advice to 'Weird, Creepy, Controlling' Trump and Republican Allies She took to her X account and stated, "If Republican leaders don't enjoy being called weird, creepy, and controlling, they could try not being weird, creepy, and controlling," as reported by HuffPost. 07/30/2024 - 5:33 pm | View Link
“After days of threats and demands, Donald Trump had little to show for it once lawmakers passed a budget deal in the early hours of Saturday, narrowly averting a pre-Christmas government shutdown,” the AP reports.
“The president-elect successfully pushed House Republicans to jettison some spending, but he failed to achieve his central goal of raising the debt limit.
“The top uniformed police officer in the New York Police Department has resigned amid allegations he demanded sex from a subordinate in exchange for opportunities to earn extra pay,” the AP reports.
Politico: Eric Adams calls explosive allegations against NYPD ally “extremely concerning.”
A Republican strategist is lashing out at Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) months after he says he fired her as a client, dubbing the far-right lawmaker a “pitiful embarrassment,” the Daily Beast reports.
Said Wesley Donehue: “I fired Nancy Mace as client a few months back because I’m a political consultant and not a babysitter, a sex therapist or a doctor who can prescribe fixes for chemical imbalances.
“The 118th Congress ended almost exactly as it began: with chaos in the House of Representatives that threatened to consume its GOP leader and shut down the government,” the Washington Post reports.
“While he avoided the ignominious event of a government shutdown, with just hours to spare, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) still faces a daunting vote at the start of the next Congress, on Jan.
“Justice Clarence Thomas failed to disclose two additional trips from a billionaire patron that had not previously come to light, Senate Democrats revealed on Saturday after conducting a 20-month investigation into ethics practices at the Supreme Court,” the New York Times reports.
Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) said he voted against the stopgap spending bill in “protest” of how the government is run, CNN reports.
Said Romney: “While I support keeping government open, I voted no on the CR—a simple protest of the absurd way this is to run government.”