A former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, has described President Joe Biden as one of the most consequential presidents in American history. Pelosi made the statement during her farewell speech to Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris on Wednesday.
The books fly in the face of the library’s own stated goal to serve as a strictly nonpartisan resource in the capitol.
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is one of several Democrats who won't be attending President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration.
Former House Speaker Nancy ... for The United States Government. They are outstanding in every way, and you will see the fruits of their labor over the coming years. We will MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, and it will happen very quickly!” the president ...
In former President Joe Biden's final hours as the President of the United States, he pardoned members of his ... taking a photo with his feet propped up on former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's desk. Richard "Bigo" Barnett, 64 of Gravette, was sentenced ...
The Democratic party’s trials will not end soon. As Trump takes office, he and his team will shine a spotlight on Democrats’ dishonest efforts to bar him from public office.
In positioning himself as a junior partner to the president and doing his bidding on matters large and small, the Louisiana Republican is diminishing a job that involves leading a coequal branch of government.
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi daughter Alexandra has some ... Such a consequential president of the United States, a Mount Rushmore kind of president of the United States.'
LIVE: Donald Trump Promises "Largest Deportation in US History" on Day One | Firstpost America | N18G Donald Trump will soon take oath as the 47th president of the United States. Before the swearing-in,
President Donald Trump littered a Wednesday interview on Fox News with many of the same false claims he made earlier in his first three days back in the White House.
The president just gave roughly 1,500 Capitol rioters a clean slate, even though many of them brutally assaulted roughly 140 officers.
Stewart Rhodes, with his signature black eyepatch, waved to a crowd as he strolled out of a federal prison a free man after serving fewer than two years of his 18-year sentence...