NBC News' Kristen Welker pressed House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries on what he would tell Americans who felt mislead by Democrats on Sunday.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries defended supporting Joe Biden’s reelection bid when asked to address Americans who felt “misled” about the president’s health during a Sunday interview with NBC News.
The end of Joe Biden’s presidency on Monday was extraordinary in many ways. Among them, nothing was more extraordinary than his use of the president’s power to grant pardons and reprieves. Most of the clemencies Biden had granted to that point were standard in their form,
President Donald Trump has seemingly picked a reporter to give some of the largest scoops to ahead of his first days in office: NBC’s Kristen Welker. Welker has managed to illicit some of Trump’s most notable reactions to breaking news in the last week.
Joe Biden, the outgoing Democrat, protected pardoned Jan. 6 officers, while Donald Trump, the incoming Republican, pardoned Jan. 6 criminals.
Donald Trump responds to the pardons Joe Biden issued in the last hours of his presidency in a text message to NBC’s Kristen Welker. “It is disgraceful. Many are guilty of major crimes,” he wrote.
President-elect Donald Trump slammed President Joe Biden’s last minute preemptive pardons to several prominent political figures as “disgraceful.” Biden’s pardons, issued on Monday, covered former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Anthony Fauci,
The new president agreed to let violent criminals back onto American streets, and then peddled discredited conspiracy theories and lies about the attack.
President Biden's last-minute preemptive pardons of Dr. Anthony Fauci, Liz Cheney and Gen. Mark Milley were widely panned on social media on Monday.
US President Joe Biden issued preemptive pardons on Monday (US time) for people his successor Donald Trump has targeted for retaliation, including Republican former lawmaker Liz Cheney, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley, and Anthony Fauci, who served as White House chief medical advisor.
Donald Trump's inauguration, quite ironically on Martin Luther King Day, went off on expected lines and there was a flurry of activities immediately after that as if Trump meant "Business". Yes, Business with a capital "B".