Marjorie Taylor Greene has a history of making controversial comments on Twitter and other social media. The latest involves the Pentagon leak.
Author: Rachel Looker, USA TODAY
Former Starbucks CEO testifies during Senate hearing on treatment of employees unionizing
Former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz said in a Senate hearing Wednesday the coffee company did not break the law.
This week in politics: Biden’s budget; McConnell hospitalized; Americans divided on ‘woke’
President Joe Biden released his budget proposal this week that includes new taxes on wealthy Americans and a federal deficit reduction.
‘It’s time to clear the path to equality’: Senate revisits Equal Rights Amendment after 40 years
The effort to boost women’s rights follows the “Me Too” movement in 2017 and the Supreme Court 2022 ruling to overturn Roe v. Wade, curbing abortion.
House ethics panel to investigate GOP Rep. George Santos over campaign issues, other allegations
Also on Thursday, a watchdog group filed a complaint alleging Santos’ campaign committee violated campaign law by failing to disclose expenditures.
GOP introduces bill to boost parents’ classroom rights in latest education war salvo ahead of 2024
House Republicans introduced a “Parents Bill of Rights,” the latest salvo in a charged fight over who decides what is taught in classrooms and why.
Heckles, spats and deflection: The biggest moments you missed from Biden’s State of the Union
In one moving moment, Biden acknowledged the parents of Tyre Nichols, the young Black man who died after being beaten by police officers in Memphis.
Southwest Airlines executive to testify before Senate panel following flight cancelation ‘meltdown’
Southwest Airlines Chief Operating Officer Andrew Watterson will testify at the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation next week.
Ultra conservatives named to House committees leading Biden probes. What’s it mean for Biden?
Ultra-conservative Republicans are serving on two influential House committees that will spearhead investigations into the Biden administration.
Pay raise, Ukraine aid, suicide prevention: Congress OKs $858 billion in Defense spending
The bill authorizes a 4.6% pay raise for military and civilian workers. It also sends $500 million more in aid to Ukraine than Biden had proposed.