House Republicans Demand Full Impeachment Trial for Mayorkas
They argue that quickly dispensing with the charges, as senators in both parties are inclined to do, would be an affront to Americans.
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They argue that quickly dispensing with the charges, as senators in both parties are inclined to do, would be an affront to Americans.
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Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said in an interview that a Russian victory could embolden China to move against Taiwan and would fuel anti-American propaganda.
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Current Senate leaders haven’t had to fight too hard for their jobs, but Republicans now face a real contest to replace Mitch McConnell.
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Justice Clarence Thomas gave Crystal Clanton a home and a job after she left a conservative youth organization in controversy. Then the justice picked her for one of the most coveted positions in the legal world.
By Steve Eder and
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Trump Attacks R.F.K. Jr., a Third-Party Wild Card
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the independent presidential candidate, has asserted that he intends to be a “spoiler” for both Donald Trump and President Biden.
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NBC’s Ronna McDaniel Hire Wasn’t Politics, or TV, as Usual
The deal with a former R.N.C. chair who enabled election deniers risked the credibility of NBC News — and ended up pleasing no one.
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The R.N.C. Has a New Interview Question: Was the 2020 Election Stolen?
The question during job interviews at the Republican National Committee reflects Donald J. Trump’s newly tightened grip on the party apparatus.
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Kari Lake, a Trump Acolyte, Struggles to Find Her Path
The Republican Senate candidate in Arizona, who has been an election denier and Trump supporter, is seeking to appeal to establishment Republicans.
By Michael C. Bender and
At a daylong retreat, 175 of the president’s biggest financiers and fund-raisers will hear from top campaign officials.
By Shane Goldmacher
Since leaving office in 2021, former President Donald Trump has spent more than $100 million on costs related to investigations, indictments and his coming criminal trials. Shane Goldmacher, a politics reporter for The New York Times, explains where the funds came from.
By Shane Goldmacher, Gabriel Blanco, Claire Hogan and James Surdam
A Texas appeals court reversed its earlier opinion that had upheld the conviction of Crystal Mason, who was found guilty of illegally casting a provisional ballot in 2016, even though she claimed she hadn’t known she was ineligible to vote.
By Orlando Mayorquín
President Biden raised $25 million at a Radio City Music Hall event, adding to his huge cash edge, after Donald Trump pushed his law-and-order message at a wake for a police officer killed on duty.
By Lisa Lerer
Mr. Trump called the officer’s death a horrible tragedy and, as he often does on the trail, broadly called for a crackdown on violent crime without mentioning specific policies.
By Michael Gold
A granddaughter of the celebrated Maine brand’s founder, she set out as an entrepreneur in her mid-60s and used her wealth to fund right-wing causes.
By Trip Gabriel
Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said in an interview that a Russian victory could embolden China to move against Taiwan and would fuel anti-American propaganda.
By Edward Wong
They argue that quickly dispensing with the charges, as senators in both parties are inclined to do, would be an affront to Americans.
By Luke Broadwater
Justice Juan Merchan has warned Donald Trump and his lawyers to be on good behavior during the hush-money trial.
By Alan Feuer and Maggie Haberman
By Maggie Haberman, William K. Rashbaum and Michael Gold
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