The end of Trump's 'anti-weaponisation' fund is another sign Republicans are fighting back
The $1.8bn fund would have paid people the Trump administration decided were unjustly and politically targeted.
The $1.8bn fund would have paid people the Trump administration decided were unjustly and politically targeted.
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The $1.8bn fund would have paid people the Trump administration decided were unjustly and politically targeted.
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Blanche made the comments during testimony before a House subcommittee. Grouped from 9 articles across 8 sources.
The M7-M12 interchange in Western Sydney is set to open soon, but advocates say the surrounding suburbs are still missing crucial infrastructure.
Senior police figures are pushing back against politicians they accuse of stoking tensions over Henry Novak’s murder Policing could be driven back to the 1960s by false claims officers are biased against white people,…
New York’s attorney general is suing the Trump administration over one of its deals to end an offshore wind project
Senate Republicans plow ahead with their immigration enforcement budget package that was derailed ahead of the Memorial Day recess over Trump’s “Anti-Weaponization Fund.”
The U.S. is facing accusations of helping to make the Ebola outbreak in central Africa possible because of cutbacks in health funding to the region by the Trump administration. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has…