Trump, Honduras and Juan Orlando Hernandez
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The Venezuelan President has denied any ties to the illegal drug trade, and his government has condemned Trump’s warning that the country’s air space should be considered closed as a “colonialist threat” and “yet another extravagant, illegal and unjustified aggression against the Venezuelan people.”
One of the candidates to become the U.N.'s first female secretary-general, senior U.N. official Rebeca Grynspan, has pledged to restore trust in the organisation as it faces heavy criticism from U.S.
A former advisor to President Donald Trump hypothesized that there may be a surprise meeting between the president and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as Trump begins his Asian tour. “Well, it’s…always expect the unexpected with Donald Trump,
In a recent commentary in the Carroll County Times, “Two Speeches that define Trump,” columnist Tom Zirpoli asks, how could anyone watch President Donald Trump’s speeches to the United Nations General Assembly and the one he gave to our military leaders and still approve of his performance as president?
The next president of the United States will face the difficult task of restoring trust in the American government, which has been eroded by the Trump presidency, and will need to be committed to
In an interview with Reason magazine two weeks ago, Sen. Rand Paul of suggested that congressional Republicans were uncomfortable with much of what President Donald Trump was doing. But the senator said they were too “afraid” to do something about it.
The president, who has a history of disparaging African people and migrant communities, launched into a tirade over Minnesota's Somali population at the end of a Cabinet meeting.
Trump blasted Somali immigrants as 'garbage' he doesn't want in the country. But Minnesota officials called the criticism 'racism' and 'un-American.'
Saint Paul, Minnesota, Mayor Melvin Carter reacts to President Trump’s new attacks on Somali-Americans. Saying “This notion that we’re going to take a whole nation and declare a whole nation of people guilty for crimes that a couple of individuals did,
Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández was sentenced to 45 years in prison last year for a bribery scheme prosecutors say allowed 400 tons of cocaine into the U.S.