Bill Maher says Donald Trump is "a kooky guy who says a lot of kooky things," so he won't take him too seriously in his second term.
Some of Donald Trump's most controversial Cabinet picks will be trying to win over the Senate next week. It comes as Trump threatens allies and friends from Denmark to Panama, giving new meaning to "America First.
No president has ever relied as much on the operating principles of the entertainment business. And none has ever had such a fraught relationship with it.
The political pundit also curiously downplayed his prior concerns Friday on CNN's "The Lead with Jake Tapper" about the dangers of another Trump term.
President-elect Donald Trump is sworn in as U.S. President for the second time, along with Vice President-elect JD Vance, by U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts in an Inauguration Ceremony.
that Donald Trump got the White House again but won’t get Maher’s ... Instead, Maher added, he’s going to “hope for the best” and save his commentary on the HBO show for anything serious that happens. “Otherwise, I have new rules and [the ...
After inauguration day, it is on Trump and America to ensure that the oath to defend the U.S. Constitution is kept.
Two nights into Donald Trump's second term, late-night remains a last bastion of resistence, but as Bill Carter writes, the sands are shifting.
President Trump is expected to attend an inaugural prayer service at Washington National Cathedral, meet with Republican leaders, and continue to work on executive and congressional actions on Day
Mr. Trump’s co-stars may have changed, but the show has not. He remains a reality-TV star with a reality-TV performer’s instincts. (Fittingly, his swearing-in featured a performance by the country star and “American Idol” winner Carrie Underwood — like him, a reality celebrity who went on to bigger things.)
Put simply, under Trump’s order, the children of most undocumented immigrants wouldn’t be US citizens, nor would the children of people in the country on student, work, or tourist visas. This is more than a reinterpretation of the 14th Amendment — it’s an attempt to do away with the jus soli principle that undergirds US citizenship.