Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) floated the idea of new talks at his confirmation hearing to be secretary of state, while remaining largely noncommittal on the prospect
Rubio is seen as a steady foreign policy hand who has the confidence of Trump and Senate colleagues from both parties.
Rubio appeared to be on a glide path to winning confirmation as secretary of state while Bondi looks poised to become the nation’s top law enforcement official.
Donald Trump's former primary opponent Sen. Marco Rubio is meeting with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Wednesday as the president-elect's secretary of state nominee.
It’s the second day of confirmation hearings for President-elect Donald Trump’s nominees on Capitol Hill. Secretary of State nominee Florida Senator Marco Rubio and the nominee for attorney general Pam Bondi are scheduled Wednesday.
U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito and U.S. Sen. Jim Justice voted Monday in favor of a bill to place strict penalties on illegal immigrants who commit crimes in the U.S. and to approve President Donald Trump’s nominee for Secretary of State.
The 47th president issued a series of executive orders, saw his first Cabinet member confirmed and moved into the White House, all in a day's work.
U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito and U.S. Sen. Jim Justice voted Monday in favor of a bill to place strict penalties on illegal immigrants who commit crimes in the U.S. and to approve President Donald Trump’s nominee for Secretary of State.
Lawmakers advanced a controversial immigration bill and pressed forward on confirming the president’s Cabinet nominees.
President-elect Donald Trump is an impatient man. That’s why, shortly after the elections, he floated a plan to skip centuries of precedent and just appoint his cabinet nominees without going through confirmation hearings in the Senate.
Live: Rhodes and Tarrio were two of the highest-profile defendants Jan. 6 defendants and received some of the harshest punishments in what became the largest investigation in Justice Department history.
A relaxed and playful Trump invited the cameras in as he sat behind the Resolute Desk shortly before 8 p.m. and signed executive order after executive order, casually answering journalists’ questions as he changed the course of the country — and often the planet — with each stroke of the pen.