Skip to Content

AP US Politics News

Trump’s push to change Department of Defense to ‘War Department’ would turn back the clock to WWII

By BILL BARROW Associated Press ATLANTA (AP) — President Donald Trump’s push to rename the Department of Defense goes beyond subjective word choices about whether to change a name that’s been in place since 1949. On one hand is Trump’s argument that the historical name – War Department – more plainly reflects the bottom-line mission.

Continue Reading

Democrats, GOP test their playbooks as Trump looms over elections in Virginia and New Jersey

By STEVE PEOPLES, MIKE CATALINI and OLIVIA DIAZ Associated Press GARFIELD, N.J. (AP) — Democrats and Republicans are testing dueling playbooks in fall elections that will decide the leadership of Virginia and New Jersey — and perhaps a new direction for the parties heading into next year’s midterms. In both states, Democratic candidates for governor

Continue Reading

Trump signs order to designate nations that hold Americans as sponsors of wrongful detention

By MICHELLE L. PRICE Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Friday that would let the U.S. designate nations as state sponsors of wrongful detention, using the threat of associated sanctions to deter Americans from being detained abroad or taken hostage. The designation, similar to the state sponsors of

Continue Reading

Prosecutors drop federal case against woman accused of threatening to kill Trump

By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — Justice Department prosecutors are dropping their federal case against a woman who was charged with threatening to kill President Donald Trump — the latest in a string of self-inflicted setbacks for prosecutors during President Donald Trump’s law-enforcement surge in the nation’s capital. A grand jury refused to

Continue Reading

The Latest: DHS says 475 people were detained during an immigration raid in Georgia

By The Associated Press Some 475 people were detained during an immigration raid at a sprawling Georgia site where South Korean auto company Hyundai manufactures electric vehicles, according to a Homeland Security official. Steven Schrank, Special Agent in Charge, Homeland Security Investigations, said at a news briefing Friday that the majority of the people detained

Continue Reading

A Democratic governor, a Republican legislature: How Josh Stein navigates North Carolina politics

By GARY D. ROBERTSON Associated Press FLETCHER, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein has taken an unusual approach with Republican political opponents in his first eight months leading a highly competitive state where divided government has become the norm. He’s trying to get along with them. Stein, who succeeded fellow Democrat Roy Cooper

Continue Reading

Trump administration targets Boston in latest sanctuary city lawsuit

By HOLLY RAMER Associated Press The Trump administration sued the city of Boston and its leaders Thursday in its latest attempt to invalidate policies seen as interfering with immigration enforcement. The suit alleges that Boston’s sanctuary city policies are illegal under federal law and the city’s refusal to cooperate with immigration authorities has resulted in

Continue Reading

New Mexico governor calls on state lawmakers to shore up safety net programs from Trump’s cuts

By MORGAN LEE Associated Press SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico’s governor is calling on state lawmakers to shore up safety net programs in response to federal spending cuts enacted by President Donald Trump, in an announcement Thursday that highlighted reduced federal support for Medicaid and food assistance programs. More than 40% of New

Continue Reading

Photos from a fiery 3-hour Senate hearing with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

By MARK SCHIEFELBEIN Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. faced pointed bipartisan questioning during a contentious three-hour Senate hearing Thursday addressing his efforts to pull back COVID-19 vaccine recommendations and the turmoil he has created at federal health agencies. ___ This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo

Continue Reading

Republican Gabriel Sterling, defender of 2020 Georgia election, runs for secretary of state

By JEFF AMY Associated Press ATLANTA (AP) — A former top elections official who made a name for himself defending Georgia’s 2020 presidential election tally against threats from supporters of President Donald Trump is now running to be the state’s elections chief. Republican Gabriel Sterling, 54, filed paperwork Tuesday to run for secretary of state

Continue Reading

Northwestern University president says he will resign following tenure marked by White House tension

By ANNIE MA AP Education Writer Northwestern University President Michael Schill said Thursday that he will resign, ending a three-year tenure marked by the freeze of hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding by the Trump administration and heated criticism from House Republicans over the university’s response to campus protests. The funding freeze and

Continue Reading