Mitch McConnell is still throwing jabs at Donald Trump. “We’re in a very, very dangerous world right now, reminiscent of before World War II,” the longtime Republican Senate leader told the Financial Times. “Even the slogan is the same.
The op-ed urges Trump to embrace the U.S.’s “hard power” as he cites "inescapable reality" that America's competition with Russia and China is global.
Senator Mitch McConnell has taken another swipe at President-elect Donald Trump a mere few days after saying the nation “will not be made great again” seemingly by his leadership on Saturday. In an interview with the Financial Times published Wednesday,
The feud between Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell could soon spark anew in the next Congress with the Kentucky Republican poised to hold ample sway over the president-elect’s agenda and n
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell warn on Monday warned President-elect Donald Trump about adopting the "isolationist" voices within the GOP to build his foreign policy, urging him to reject it and instead take up a foreign policy rooted in military strength and global engagement.
Despite his recent partisan history, Mitch McConnell has thrown a lot of brushback pitches in Donald Trump's direction lately.
Mitch McConnell's legacy is still being written. My hope is that he will prevent the most damaging parts of a Trump presidency from becoming reality.
In a recent interview, outgoing Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell teed off on Trump’s “America First” movement and made reference to its fascist roots.
McConnell’s statement comes after a New York Times report revealed that an attorney linked to Robert F. Kennedy Jr., petitioned the Food and Drug Administration to get rid of its approval of the
Sen. Mitch McConnell challenges Trump’s "America First" approach overseas, advocating a more proactive foreign policy in a dangerous world.
Mitch McConnell, the retiring Senate minority leader, has warned Donald Trump against embracing “right-wing isolationism” when he returns to the White House in January.
When President Joe Biden commuted the prison terms of hundreds of so-called “non-violent” offenders last week, he reopened an old wound for one Mississippi family. The family is speaking out after a convicted oncologist,