Putin, Trump
Digest more
The vice president, long a skeptic of US military intervention, is the rare figure in the administration who can appeal to both the realist and hawkish wings of the GOP.
President Trump's new executive order aims to "Make America Beautiful Again" by raising national park fees for foreign visitors while maintaining affordability for American families.
38m
PRIMETIMER on MSNWho is Mahmoud Khalil and why is he filing a $20 million lawsuit against POTUS Donald Trump?Mahmoud Khalil is a Palestinian-American activist and Columbia graduate suing the Trump administration for $20 million, claiming illegal arrest, wrongful detention, and defamation tied to his pro-Palestinian campus activism.
The rapid changes in Trump’s foreign policy are an expression of his commitment to an imperialist war in defense of American capital.
Mahmoud Khalil alleges in the claim that the Trump-led government abused its power to falsely arrest, imprison and prosecute him.
Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said Trump practices “purposeful strategic ambiguity” in foreign policy to give himself leverage in negotiations. “World leaders fear him, respect him, and hang on every word he says,” she said.
"It's certainly possible that one of the impacts of tariff hikes is we'll see an increase in supplier bankruptcies in 2025 and 2026," a source told Newsweek.
Report is The Hill’s a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here or using the box below: In today’s issue: ▪ Trump focuses on foreign policy legacy ▪ Copper, pharmaceutical tariffs coming
President Trump is hosting Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu this week as they work on a ceasefire in Gaza. He's also resuming military aid shipments to Ukraine after they were temporarily halted.
The nonjury trial for American Association of University Professors v. Rubio is expected to last about two weeks.
Trump’s new foreign policy leans toward recognizing spheres of influence, departing from past interventionism and potentially avoiding future great power conflicts, especially with China, if handled with restraint and clarity.
Tensions between the U.S. and its NATO allies have cooled off since most of the alliance's member states agreed to increase their defense spending from 2 percent of GDP to 5 percent by 2035, which many Trump supporters say is proof that his hard-charging negotiating tactics, even among friends, produces results.