Trump, Washington Commanders and Redskins
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GB News on MSNDonald Trump vows to 'Make Indians Great Again' in crackdown on 'ridiculous' sports team namesDonald Trump has pledged to "Make Indians Great Again" by forcing two American sports teams to change back their names. The NFL's Washington Commanders and MLB's Cleveland Guardians both rebranded from the Redskins and Indians respectively amid the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020.
Scott Turner, the HUD secretary and former Washington Redskins defensive back, backed President Donald Trump's push to change the Commanders' nickname.
President Donald Trump has looked to the marble finishes and hefty price tag of the Federal Reserve headquarters to claim grounds to fire Chair Jerome Powell, with whom he has tussled for years over interest rates.
The Federal Reserve is an independent organization, meant to be insulated from politics, and the Supreme Court suggested this year that President Donald Trump would need a reason, or cause, to fire Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
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ABS-CBN on MSNTrump and Epstein: What was their relationship?Donald Trump's past ties with Jeffrey Epstein are under scrutiny after the US president slammed a Wall Street Journal report that he sent a lewd letter to the infamous sex offender as "fake news."
WSYM Lansing, MI on MSN2h
Lansing flea market helps shoppers stretch their dollars while building communityTop economist sounds the alarm even louder on the housing market and says homebuilders are ‘giving up’
President Trump denies he’s considering firing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, but his administration has ramped up its criticism of the central bank’s $2.5 billion office renovation. WSJ’s Nick Timiraos explains why.
President Trump says he has finally found a way to achieve his goal of removing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, accusing him of mismanaging the U.S. central bank’s $2.5 billion renovation project.
The White House just spent six months jamming a massive legislative package through Congress with almost no margin for error. Now comes the real challenge.
WASHINGTON, July 17 (Reuters) - The Trump administration's plan to amass a database of U.S. food aid recipients for the purpose of checking immigration status and avoiding duplicate enrollment amounts to an unlawful privacy violation, lawmakers said in a letter on Thursday to Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins.