President Donald Trump said that his administration will step in and assist North Carolina as it recovers from Hurricane Helene months after the storm.
President Donald Trump headed to hurricane-battered North Carolina and wildfire-ravaged Los Angeles on Friday, using the first trip of his second administration to tour areas where politics have clouded the response to deadly disasters.
Jan. 24, President Trump Friday vowed to sign a Presidential executive order to get Western North Carolina roads built back faster.
"I'm going to North Carolina, very importantly, first," Trump told reporters on Tuesday evening from the Roosevelt Room of the White House, before confirming the rest of his itinerary about heading to the West Coast. When Trump took the Oath of Office on ...
While President Donald Trump was expected to head from D.C. to Los Angeles on Friday, he announced that he will be traveling to North Carolina first.
Biden's pardons have come under great scrutiny by many Republican lawmakers, with Rep. Mark Harris (R-NC) becoming the latest to issue criticism on the matter.
The Republican president has criticized former President Joe Biden for his administration’s response to Hurricane Helene in North Carolina. As he left the White House, he told reporters that ...
The flood of words is one of the most visible — or audible — shifts from Biden to Trump, who craves the spotlight and understands better than most politicians that attention is a form of power. He’s been speaking nearly nonstop since starting his second term, drowning out dissenting voices and leaving his opponents struggling to be heard.
Members of North Carolina’s congressional delegation immediately got to work this session preparing legislation to help make deportations easier and creating policies regarding non-citizens.
“Under his leadership, we made real progress — violent crime down, overdose deaths falling, and tighter collaboration,” said Eddie Caldwell, executive vice president and general counsel of the North Carolina Sheriffs Association, in a news release. “Easley set a new gold standard for what it means to lead in federal law enforcement.”
NEW YORK — William E. Leuchtenburg, a prize-winning historian widely admired for his authoritative writings on the U.S. presidency and as the reigning scholar on Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal, has died at 102.