President Joe Biden faced a political bind whether to open himself to Republican attacks on crime or upset Democratic allies in the nation’s capital.
Author: Joey Garrison, USA TODAY
G7 members meet virtually as Biden unveils sweeping new US sanctions on Russia
President Joe Biden’s new sanctions against Russia will target “key sectors that generate revenue for Putin,” the White House said.
White House blames Trump administration and Republicans over East Palestine, Ohio spill
Pummeled by Republicans over the East Palestine, Ohio derailment, the White House is pointing to Trump actions to roll back rail safety measures.
‘Never intended’ to sunset Social Security, Sen. Rick Scott says amid Biden criticism
Sen. Rick Scott updated his controversial proposal to sunset federal programs every five years Friday after criticism from both sides of the aisle.
Joe Biden boxes Republicans into a corner on Social Security, Medicare with an eye on 2024
President Joe Biden’s focus on Social Security and Medicare bolsters his blue-collar message ahead of an expected 2024 campaign announcements.
State of the Union takeaways: Blue-collar Joe, GOP boos and a 2024 preview
President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address previewed a working-class economic message for a widely expected reelection bid.
About 18 million college students got a financial boost from Biden’s COVID-19 rescue law
Some 450,000 students attending HBCUs and 8 million students at minority-serving institutions received aid from Joe Biden’s American Rescue Plan.
Amid debt ceiling standoff, why Joe Biden is refusing to negotiate with Republicans
President Joe Biden is betting that spending cuts pushed by Republicans will prove so unpopular that some will scrap demands in debt limit talks.
More Biden documents found after DOJ searches his Delaware home
The Department of Justice found six more items with classified material from President Joe Biden’s home in Wilmington, Delaware after a Friday search.
‘Incomprehensible’: White House slams DeSantis administration for rejecting AP Black studies
“It is incomprehensible,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Friday. “Let’s be clear. They didn’t block AP European history.”