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The agency tasked with protecting Defense Department leaders is under significant strain, and the secretary’s atypical needs are becoming untenable, officials say.
Constitutional concerns aside, this development represents the latest in an ongoing saga of Trump flip-flopping on chips, as ...
Fox News contributor Ted Williams, a criminal and civil trial attorney and former member of the Washington Metropolitan ...
With a combination of executive orders, legal maneuvers and staffing decisions, President Donald Trump has already put in ...
The administration is spitting on trans service members, while spending millions of taxpayer money to honor the Confederacy ...
Donald Trump also said he will deploy the National Guard to Washington, D.C., and place the Metropolitan Police under federal ...
President Donald Trump announced Monday that he was placing the D.C. police under direct federal control and will deploy the ...
The president’s DC takeover once again lays bare the Trump-Fox feedback loop - ANALYSIS: Whether flanked by senior officials who were once Fox hosts or waving a bunch of charts taken directly from a ...
Staff turnover across the Pentagon has Trump administration officials and GOP leaders questioning Pete Hegseth’s fitness to lead the Department of Defense’s 3.4 million employees. Sources told ...
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has privately discussed the idea of running for political office next year in Tennessee, according to two people who have spoken directly with him about it.
Suspicions about leaks and a mistrust of senior military officers have defined much of the defense secretary’s first six months on the job.
We now know where Defense Secretary Hegseth got the information he shared in that infamous Signal group chat.