Roy Cooper, United States Senate and Republicans
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Vance spoke to a crowd of steel workers in hard hats and safety glasses gathered inside a rolling mill at Metallus Inc. in Canton, Ohio.
Republicans are continuing to go at it over the Jeffrey Epstein files despite House leadership’s attempts to flee D.C. and avoid votes on the issue.
A Republican strategist involved in Senate races said, “It’s not only the threat of impeachment; it’s the idea that the administration won’t be able to get anything done for the American people because all the Democrats will be focused on is impeachment.”
1don MSN
Democrats are hammering Republicans on Epstein, but one senator brushed off the issue years ago
Congressional Democrats push for transparency on Epstein documents as Sen. Elissa Slotkin criticized the Trump administration's handling of files she once dismissed as not "front of mind."
Returning to his home state of Ohio, Vice President J.D. Vance on Monday visited a steel plant in Canton to promote elements of the president's controversial "one big, beautiful bill."
Democrats’ only real opportunity to set up a roadblock in front of President Donald Trump during his remaining years in office comes with next year’s midterm elections. They’ll need to pick up just a few seats to take control of the House.
What would California Republicans count as success in 2026? CAGOP Chair Corrin Rankin breaks it down
The early focus has been on bolstering volunteers, investing in voter contact software and rolling out a new media strategy that features influencers.
No Tax on Tips” took center stage Friday during a visit from the House of Representatives’ Ways and Means Committee to Las Vegas to promote President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill.
G.O.P. leaders scrounging for the votes to push through the president’s priorities have increasingly turned to him and his team to win over holdouts with special carve-outs and commitments.
Even as the Trump administration pursues a hardline approach to enforcing immigration law, some congressional Republicans acknowledge the need to expand immigration opportunities for workers in specialized sectors such as agriculture.