Elected officials in Queens have sharply criticized President Donald Trump’s first day in office, condemning the flurry of executive orders he signed immediately after his inauguration. The sweeping directives,
Elected officials and immigrant advocacy organizations in Queens are urging undocumented immigrants to familiarize themselves with their rights
As Donald Trump takes the oath of office to begin his second term as president, the Trump family will once again be back in the spotlight. Scandals are generally par for the course in powerful dynasties and while the president is the most famous—or infamous—member of his family,
Trump started with a repudiation of everybody sitting in the front two rows on his left. As Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Barack Obama, the Clintons and George W. Bush listened, trying to keep muted expressions, Trump unleashed a withering denunciation of American leaders who have created a “crisis of trust.”
Donald Trump is sworn in as the 47th President of the USA, with ceremonies conducted inside the Capitol due to harsh weather. He has a complex family tree with five adult children from three marriages,
"The Trump Organization is dedicated to not just meeting but vastly exceeding its legal and ethical obligations during my father's Presidency," said executive vice president Eric Trump. The Trump ...
During the family's first stint in the White House, Trump appointed two of his sons to lead The Trump Organization ... and immigrant Born and raised in Queens, New York, Trump is one of real ...
He was born in New York and built much of his career in constructing middle-class homes in Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island. He founded the Trump Organization, which was later inherited by his ...
One particular pressing unfilled need is for interpreters who can speak Q’eqchi’, a Mayan language spoken by Indigenous people in a region of Guatemala, Belize and southern Mexico that has been plagued by drought, failed crops and hunger in recent years. Spanish- and French-speakers are also useful.
Felon 47.”That is the new moniker City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams (D-Jamaica) ascribed to President Trump at a Martin Luther King Jr. Day event in Jamaica on Monday.
Far-right lawmakers and extremist influencers the world over are celebrating Trump’s early days in office and advocating for similar efforts in their own countries.
L. Brent Bozell III, once a critic of President Trump, now runs an organization that criticizes the media for perceived bias against Republicans, particularly Mr. Trump.