Trump, GOP
Digest more
President Donald Trump reportedly called Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine after she voted to curb the president's war powers this week and expressed his frustrations in a "profanity-laced rant," The Hill reports. When reached for comment on Friday, Collins' office told Newsweek via email that the call did occur but offered no details.
Rogue Republican Thomas Massie has savaged his party’s botched handling of controversial issues, from the economy to Jeffrey Epstein. Massie has infuriated President Donald Trump by repeatedly criticizing the staggered release of all of the Epstein files,
Rep. Doug LaMalfa’s sudden death shrinks GOP’s slim House majority, raising stakes for California and Trump’s 2026 agenda.
SCHENECTADY — Matt Nelligan, the party’s 2023 candidate for mayor, has been picked to be executive director of the Schenectady County Republican Party. He was appointed to the second-in-command leadership post Monday by Liz Joy, chair of the county’s Republicans, who in announcing her choice, lauded Nelligan as tough, smart and loyal.
In a meeting with House Republicans Tuesday, President Trump tried to offer his party a "roadmap" to maintain their congressional majorities in the midterms.Then, NPR's Michel Martin asks GOP strategist Ron Bonjean about the Republican Party's legislative priorities and challenges ahead of the midterms.
8don MSN
Musk signals GOP support in 2026 – months after Trump feud, pledge to start new political party
Billionaire Elon Musk signaled Thursday that he’ll fund Republican candidates ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, arguing the country is doomed if Democrats take control of Congress. “America is toast if the radical left wins,” Musk wrote on X. “They will open the floodgates to illegal immigration and fraud.
Desert Storm veteran Doug Mastriano bows out of 2026 Pennsylvania governor race but vows his conservative 'Walk as Free People' movement will continue.
A new analysis of voter data found that the “God gap” between Republicans and Democrats has never been bigger, even as religious attendance drops among GOP voters.
New Jersey Republicans have a new leader after failing in their bid for the governor’s mansion and losing ground in the state legislature last year. The state party elected Monmouth County Clerk Christine Hanlon as its next chairwoman on Monday,
Representative Thomas Massie, a rare Republican critic of President Trump’s military intervention, explained his concerns in an interview with The New York Times.