Stock movements this week has been choppy as investors weighed the inflationary impact of the war in the Middle East. The jobs report has complicated matters.
Colton Moore, who hopes to win a special election on Tuesday to replace Ms. Greene, has the same flair for the dramatic and the ultra-MAGA persona, but he lacks one thing: a Trump endorsement.
Other politicians tend to “hide under the desk,” said Colton Moore who is running in Tuesday’s special election for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District. He does not.
Social workers are scrambling to alert recipients and help them find jobs before their aid is eliminated under President Trump’s sweeping domestic policy law.
Construction of townhouses in Simpsonville, S.C. Home building and other aspects of the economy, in addition to the jobs numbers, have seen large revisions in recent years.
Colton Moore, who hopes to win a special election on Tuesday to replace Ms. Greene, has the same flair for the dramatic and the ultra-MAGA persona, but he lacks one thing: a Trump endorsement.
Other politicians tend to “hide under the desk,” said Colton Moore who is running in Tuesday’s special election for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District. He does not.
His call to ‘freeze the rent’ galvanized the 69 percent of New Yorkers who don’t own their homes. But the city’s landlords claim the math doesn’t add up.
Sales and traffic at restaurant chains like Cava, Chipotle and Sweetgreen are falling, as customers grow tired of both salad bowls and their rising price tags.
The emergency department of a hospital in Los Angeles. As fast as the health care sector has been expanding, it’s unclear whether the supply of workers can keep pace with the ever-growing need.
One inmate paid lobbyists and lawyers with ties to the president’s team and walked free. Others are following his blueprint, but it is not always clear who can deliver.
Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis said “Good riddance” after Ms. Noem’s ouster. Gov. Tim Walz and others said they still wanted a “complete overhaul” of the department.
The president’s choice of Senator Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma to replace her at the Department of Homeland Security could trigger a cascade of aspirants for his seat.
Senator Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma’s term expires at the end of this year, so whoever is appointed to fill his seat will be a short termer in the Senate.
An impassioned orator, he was a moral and political force, forming a “rainbow coalition” of poor and working-class people and seeking the presidency. His mission, he said, was “to transform the mind of America.”