Trump, Homelessness and Executive Order
Digest more
Trump, birthright citizenship and Supreme Court
Digest more
Trump, EU and Ursula von der Leyen
Digest more
Cambodia and Thailand exchanged fire across their disputed border for a fourth day on Sunday, hours after US President Donald Trump announced the two Southeast Asian nations had agreed to ceasefire talks and threatened continued fighting would jeopardize their trade deals with Washington.
Across the country, Trump’s immigration raids have roiled farms and farming communities – with cases of worker shortages and fears of unpicked crops.
1hon MSN
It's a year of rapid change, except when it comes to Trump's approval numbers, AP-NORC polling finds
The new Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research polling tracker shows that overall views of President Donald Trump’s job performance have been steady over the past few months.
President Trump has come under fire from a section of his MAGA base over his handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case.
As Mr. Trump golfed Saturday at his course in Turnberry, Scotland, hundreds of protesters took to the streets to denounce his presence elsewhere in Britain, opposing the administration’s policies on immigration,
The president likes to cite specific numbers to bolster his claims. They are often wildly improbable — or just impossible.
19h
Irish Star on MSNLara Trump drops political bombshell after father-in-law Donald awkwardly snubs campaign
President Donald Trump's daughter-in-law Lara Trump has announced that she has ended her bid for the North Carolina U.S. Senate seat after the president endorsed her opponent
Celebrating the sixth-month mark of his second term, Trump said the United States is the 'hottest' and most respected Country anywhere in the World."
1d
Tuko News on MSNDonald Trump introduces KSh 32k integrity fee for Kenyans visiting US, raises cost of travel
The US president Donald Trump has introduced a KSh 32,000 (approximately $250) "integrity fee" for Kenyans seeking to travel to the United States.
The Epstein uproar has revealed an unexpected danger—for the president—of a Justice Department that seems partisan