I n just three weeks, President Donald Trump has exploded long-standing U.S. foreign policy and sided with Russia against Ukraine and
The U.S. vote against a United Nations resolution condemning Russian aggression is becoming another tension point between President Trump and Senate Republicans. Why it matters: Republicans are bracing to have their party's leader challenge or undercut their core assumption about foreign policy.
I can’t afford not to be optimistic,” says Steven Moore, who splits his time between delivering aid in Ukraine and debunking propaganda back home.
Republican lawmakers are sounding the alarm over the Trump administration’s pointed refusal to blame Russia for starting the war in Ukraine, and they are highly skeptical about negotiating any
Hegseth is hardly the only prominent Republican official who has dodged the question since President Donald Trump outrageously claimed that Ukraine “started” the war. Mike Waltz, Trump’s national security adviser, also repeatedly refused to answer the question.
This is what Republicans are doing now: going against all of their strongest convictions about America’s role in the world—about the threat of Russia, the threat of Putin—to bend the knee to Trump,” says Jen Psaki on Republicans like Marco Rubio,
Congressional Republicans have largely avoided criticizing Trump over his dramatic shift of America's long-standing Russia policy.
Republican senators are pushing back against the Trump administration’s reluctance to blame Russia for the Ukraine war, particularly after the U.S. sided with Russia and North Korea in a U.N. vote opposing a resolution condemning Moscow’s aggression.
A harried Sen. Lindsey Graham waved off reporters last week as he sped through a Capitol hallway heading to a key meeting with Vice President JD Vance and his Senate Republican colleagues. “Not now,” he said,
Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) on Tuesday said Vladimir Putin should be “in jail for the rest of his life, if not executed,” as President Donald Trump appears to be seeking closer ties with the Russian leader.
Despite a widening gap between the White House and the GOP’s defense wing over Russia, many Republicans weren’t ready to break completely with Trump. The Senate’s top Republican, Majority ...
The U.S. voted against a resolution condemning Russia as the aggressor in the war in Ukraine that passed the United Nations General Assembly on Monday, marking three years since Russia’s launched