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White smoke: Boehner’s encounter with Pope Francis changed Congress forever
An audience with the pope is a day to remember.
But only on Capitol Hill would the day after the pope visited become even more memorable.
The late Pope Francis came to Washington, D.C., to speak to a Joint Meeting of Congress on Sept. 24, 2015. He wasn’t the first pontiff to descend on Capitol Hill. But the pope is a head of state, ruling the Vatican City and the Holy See. As such, Francis became the first pope to speak to a Joint Meeting of Congress in the House chamber.
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Pope Francis leads his traditional Wednesday General Audience at St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City on March 8, 2023. (Stefano Costantino/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Lawmakers showered the Holy Father with applause and two standing ovations during his address. Two Catholics were perched behind Pope Francis on the dais: then Vice President Joe Biden and former House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. As vice president, Biden served as President of the Senate. As speaker, Boehner was the Constitutional officer for the legislative branch.
Boehner blotted his eyes with a handkerchief several times during the 3,400-word speech.
Pope Francis implored lawmakers to treat each other — and their constituents — with dignity.
«We need to avoid a common temptation nowadays. To discard whatever proves troublesome. Let us remember the Golden Rule: ‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you,’» he said.
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President Joe Biden, left, exchanges gifts with Pope Francis as they meet at the Vatican on Oct. 29, 2021. (Vatican Media via AP)
One thing I remember about the Pope’s visit was the choreography. Congressional workers affixed small, green strips of tape to the Capitol’s marble floors. Names were emblazoned on the tape in black Magic Marker at different points around the complex. «McCarthy» or «Pelosi» or «McConnell.» All part of the political — and papal — stagecraft.
The tape dictated where key political leaders would stand as they escorted Pope Francis into the House chamber or in front of the statue of Junipero Serra in Statuary Hall.
A duct-taped «X» marked the floor in front of Serra. The pope canonized Serra the day before he visited the Capitol at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington. Serra became the first American to become a saint on U.S. soil. Pope Francis blessed the statue of Serra. The statue depicts the saint hoisting a cross in his right hand, looking skyward toward the heavens.
Someone taped a green arrow over the black and white tiles of Statuary Hall, pointing toward the Speaker’s Office.
That signaled the pope’s next stop on Capitol Hill.
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Pope Francis addresses the joint session of Congress in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 24, 2015. (Vincenzo Pinto/AFP via Getty Images)
Pope Francis and the entourage then walked toward Boehner’s office and onto the Speaker’s Balcony overlooking the West Front of the Capitol and down the National Mall toward the Washington Monument.
A throng assembled on the Capitol grounds.
«Buenos dias,» said the Pope, greeting the crowd like he would from the «Pope’s Window» at the Apostolic Palace at the Vatican on a Sunday. «I am grateful for your presence.»
He then blessed the pilgrims on the ground below.
«Papa! Papa!» the crowd chanted.
When the pope first arrived at the Capitol, he met with Boehner in the Speaker’s ceremonial office just off the House floor.
Boehner paced nervously awaiting Pope Francis on the 19th century Minton Tiles, which adorn the office.
«He’s on Boehner time,» said the former speaker. «Which is on time.»
Boehner wore his signature Kelly green tie for the occasion — a vintage piece of Boehner apparel, which dates back to when he served in the Ohio state legislature and first ran for Congress in 1990. When Pope Francis arrived, he told the former speaker the tie bore a «color of hope.»
A few days later, Boehner choked up as he relayed a story about what Pope Francis said to him when they were about to exit the Capitol.
«We found ourselves alone,» said Boehner of himself and Francis.

Pope Francis ponders during the inauguration of a UNESCO chair at the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome on Oct. 7, 2021. (Filippo Monteforte/AFP via Getty Images)
The pope grabbed the speaker’s arm.
«The pope puts his arm around me and kind of pulled me to him and said, ‘Please pray for me,’» said Boehner. «Wow. Who am I to pray for the pope?’ But I did.»
Boehner left the Capitol that night. But his encounter with the Holy Father seemingly transformed the speaker — and altered the trajectory of the House for years to come.
The speaker decided to resign the next morning.
«He had been trying to get out of here for years,» said one source close to the speaker at the time.
Boehner’s plans to depart were thwarted when the heir apparent, former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., stunningly lost his primary in the spring of 2014.
So Boehner soldiered on.
By late July 2015, former Trump White House chief of staff and former Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., prepped a «motion to vacate the chair.» Those who follow Capitol Hill know all about such a motion now. But it was novel a decade ago. Such a motion would require the House to take a vote of confidence in the speaker in the middle of the Congress. Lawmakers had never used the tactic before. It was hardly discussed.

Pope Francis meets President Donald Trump in the Private Library of the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City on May 24, 2017. (Vatican/Pool/Galazka/Archivio Grzegorz Galazka/Mondadori via Getty Images)
Meadows released his resolution just before the August recess — but never triggered it.
That gave Boehner and the House a month to stew over whether Meadows might try to oust the speaker when lawmakers returned in September.
On the night after the pope’s visit, Boehner called his chief of staff, Mike Sommers, to tell him he planned to step aside. Boehner also told his wife, Debbie, of his plans.
«This morning I woke up, said my prayers, as I always do, and thought, ‘This is the day I am going to do this,’» said Boehner.
Boehner then astonished a meeting of the House Republican Conference that he intended to resign.
The move sent a shock wave through Washington.
«My first job as speaker is to protect the institution,» Boehner said. «It had become clear to me that this prolonged leadership turmoil would do irreparable harm to the institution.»
The Boehner departure — the day after his encounter with Pope Francis — set into motion what some might regard as the very «prolonged leadership turmoil» that the former speaker hoped to avoid.
It was believed that former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. — then the House Majority Leader — would ascend to the job. But as startling as Boehner’s departure was, McCarthy supplanted that. Moments before House Republicans were set to tap McCarthy as the next speaker, McCarthy withdrew from the contest. He lacked the votes.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., looks on at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 3, 2023. (Nathan Howard/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
McCarthy’s decision roiled Capitol Hill for weeks. Former House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., eventually took the job. But Ryan was reluctant. He even put out a statement that he didn’t want it.
Others jumped in: Rep. Daniel Webster, R-Fla., along with former Reps. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, and Bill Flores, R-Texas.
But Ryan finally came around. Fox was told at the time that if Ryan hadn’t come around, «there would be blood on the floor» of the House as Republicans waged an internecine donnybrook.
Ryan remained as House speaker until he retired in early 2019. Democrats won the House in the 2018 midterms. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., returned to the speakership she held eight years before.
But Democrats lost the House in the 2022 midterms. And even though McCarthy touted a 40-plus-seat rout for the GOP, Republicans controlled the House by a thread.
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House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., left, and former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. (Getty Images)
Thus, it set into motion a five-day battle in early 2023 as McCarthy struggled for 15 rounds before winning the speakership. It was the longest speaker’s race since the mid-19th century.
But McCarthy was gone by early November.
Remember that «motion to vacate the chair» mentioned earlier?
Meadows never activated his motion in 2015. But former Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., did in 2023.
McCarthy was done. And the House spent three weeks trying to elect a new speaker.
First they tried House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La. Then House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. Then House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, R-Minn.
None prevailed.
Finally, a backbencher emerged from the fray: House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La.

Rep. Mike Johnson, a Republican from Louisiana, holds the gavel after being re-elected House speaker during the first session of the 119th Congress in the House Chamber of the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 3. (Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The House of Representatives has never quite been the same since Boehner made his surprise announcement after his encounter with Pope Francis. The speakership seems to teeter on an edge these days — at least when Republicans run the chamber. Johnson periodically endures threats to «vacate the chair.» Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., tried to bounce him just last year.
During the speaker succession fight of 2015 and the three-week speaker debacle of 2023, friends asked if «white smoke» would emanate from the Capitol Dome. They facetiously suggested that it would signal the election of a new House speaker.
The College of Cardinals will begin a conclave in Rome in a few days to select a successor to Pope Francis. It’s a political process. Not unlike what happens in Congress when there’s a vacancy in the speakership. We’ll know there’s a new pope when white smoke wafts out of a duct atop the Sistine Chapel.
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Cardinals of the Catholic Church attended the election conclave in the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican in Vatican City on April 18, 2005. (Arturo Mari, Vatican Pool)
It was an important day when Pope Francis spoke to a Joint Meeting of Congress in 2015. But in sheer Congressional terms, the day afterward was seismic for the nature of the institution. Boehner’s abrupt resignation ushered in an unsettled era about who presides over the House. The visit by Pope Francis and Boehner’s departure forever melded the two together in the annals of Capitol Hill.
And as a result, whenever there’s a House speaker interregnum in the future, political observers will always look for political «white smoke» to find out if lawmakers have settled on a new leader.
Politics,Pope Francis,Congress,House Of Representatives
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Tim Walz leading Dem effort to turn bipartisan group against President Trump: report

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Progressive governor and failed vice presidential candidate Tim Walz is leading a Democratic effort to turn one of the country’s most influential bipartisan groups against President Donald Trump, according to a report by a mainstream media outlet.
Walz, the governor of Minnesota and one-time running mate of former Vice President Kamala Harris, is threatening to pull out of the bipartisan National Governors Association (NGA) over concerns it is not doing enough to push back against Trump, according to The Atlantic.
The Atlantic reported that two unnamed people «familiar with the governors’ thinking» shared that at least two Democratic governors — Walz and fellow Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly, who is head of the Democratic Governors Association — are opting to stop paying their NGA dues this month.
The two governors will not renew their membership in the organization out of frustration with its inaction against perceived violations of states’ rights by the Trump administration.
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Walz, the governor of Minnesota and one-time running mate of former Vice President Kamala Harris, is threatening to pull out of the bipartisan National Governors Association over concerns it is not doing enough to push back against Trump, according to The Atlantic. (Getty Images)
The concerns raised included the Office of Management and Budget briefly pausing disbursements of federal funds in January, the clash with Democratic Gov. Janet Mills over transgender athletes and Trump’s deployment of the California National Guard to respond to the anti-ICE riots in Los Angeles.
The outlet reported three other unnamed sources saying that Walz and Kelly are not alone and that the offices of other Democratic governors are similarly frustrated with the NGA.
One of the unnamed sources said «when you are also paying dues with taxpayer dollars, it has got to be worth it, and they are going to have to demonstrate that. Right now, they are not doing that,» the outlet reported.
The source also claimed «there have been ongoing concerns about the NGA among the Democratic governors and staff, off and on, for years.»
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The Atlantic reported that two unnamed people «familiar with the governors’ thinking» shared that at least two Democratic governors — Walz and fellow Gov. Laura Kelly, head of the Democratic Governors Association — are opting to stop paying their NGA dues this month. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The NGA has existed as a forum for bipartisan collaboration among governors since 1908. The organization lists all 50 governors as well as leaders of five U.S. territories as members.
Eric Wohlschlegel, NGA communications director, told Fox News Digital the group «exists to bring governors from both parties together around shared priorities.»
Amid the Walz-led controversy, Wohlschlegel said NGA’s «mission hasn’t changed.»
«Every public statement NGA issues reflects bipartisan consensus,» he said. «So far this year, all but one statement has had that consensus, and when governors don’t agree, we simply don’t issue one. That’s how we preserve our role as a bipartisan convener, a principle we won’t compromise.»
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A source familiar with the situation blamed the controversy on «Democratic infighting, unspoken campaign jockeying and a few anonymous voices looking to reshape a nonpartisan institution into a political one.»
That source pointed out that, despite all the noise about controversy, the NGA’s summer meeting in Colorado Springs this weekend is expected to have «record turnout» with 13 Republican and seven Democratic leaders attending.
They also noted that «no governors are on the record expressing discontent with the NGA. No allegations of misconduct, governance failure or mismanagement have been raised.»

Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly enters the House chamber for the State of the State address at the Kansas State Capitol Jan. 10, 2024, in Topeka, Kan. (Emily Curiel/The Kansas City Star/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
«What’s behind the noise?» the source added. «There’s an internal power struggle currently and no consensus among Democrats right now on how to lead, how to message or how to govern in a divided environment.
«Several Democratic governors are vying for national attention, testing messages for future campaigns rather than collaborating on consensus governance,» the source added. «The NGA’s bipartisan model is working exactly as it’s supposed to.
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«When a party can’t agree with itself, it becomes easy to take shots at bipartisan institutions that don’t serve short-term political goals.»
Fox News Digital reached out to the offices of Democratic Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, the outgoing NGA chair, and Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt of Oklahoma, the incoming chair, for comment on the Walz mutiny.
Though not addressing the controversy directly, Conor Cahill, a spokesperson for Polis, told Fox News Digital the governor «has been honored» to lead the NGA and to «work across the aisle with governors on education, permitting reform, standing up to federal efforts to strip away gubernatorial authority around the National Guard and elevating the priorities of states.»

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt speaks as Gov. Jared Polis of Colorado listens at the NGA in Washington (Fox News/Charlie Creitz)
He added that «during this polarizing time, bipartisan organizations are needed more than ever, and NGA must continue to demonstrate value to all governors and effectively communicate governors’ opinions on various matters with the public and the federal government.»
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Abegail Cave, a spokesperson for Stitt, who will become NGA chair this weekend, told Fox News Digital «people seem to forget NGA is a bipartisan organization, not a political one.»
«Coming to bipartisan consensus is difficult, but governors from across the political spectrum are addressing the real challenges facing Americans every day,» Cave said.
She said that Stitt «looks forward to leading this organization and finding more areas of collaboration in the coming year.»
Fox News Digital also reached out to the offices of Walz and Kelly but did not receive responses by the time of publication.
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Tensión en el sudeste asiático: Tailandia bombardea Camboya, en una disputa que deja una decena de muertos

El ejército tailandés bombardeó este jueves objetivos militares en Camboya y reportó la muerte de al menos 12 personas en su territorio por disparos del país vecino, en los peores enfrentamientos en 15 años entre estos dos reinos del sudeste asiático.
Los dos países mantienen desde hace décadas una disputa territorial en el Triángulo de Esmeralda, una zona donde confluyen sus fronteras y la de Laos y donde se conservan varios templos antiguos.
En mayo estallaron enfrentamientos armados en los que murió un soldado camboyano. Desde entonces, los dos bandos intercambiaron críticas, provocaciones y represalias, como la restricción de los cruces fronterizos o las importaciones.
Las hostilidades se desataron nuevamente el jueves. Camboya disparó cohetes y proyectiles de artillería sobre Tailandia, que desplegó de su lado seis aviones de combate para bombardear dos objetivos militares en el país vecino.
El Ministerio de Salud tailandés señaló que los ataques camboyanos habían matado a 12 personas, un soldado y 11 civiles. La mayoría de las víctimas murieron cerca de una estación de servicio en la provincia de Sisaket, dos en la provincia de Surin y una en Ubon Ratchathani, todas en el noreste.
Imágenes publicadas en las redes sociales muestran un minimercado consumido por las llamas.
Responsables provinciales informaron que la mayoría de las víctimas son estudiantes, mientras que un niño de ocho años falleció en Surin.
China, que suele mantener buenas relaciones con ambos países, expresó el jueves estar «profundamente preocupada» por estos choques e invitó a las dos partes a «resolver el problema de forma adecuada mediante el diálogo y la consultación», dijo su portavoz diplomático Guo Jiakun.
La Unión Europea hizo un llamado a la desescalada y pidió a ambas partes a que «resuelvan las disputas a través del diálogo y otros medios pacíficos, en línea con el derecho internacional».
En tanto, el primer ministro malasio y actual presidente temporal de la Asociación de Naciones del Sudeste Asiático (ASEAN), Anwar Ibrahim, pidió a ambos países a «moderación» y manifestó su deseo de que se inicien negociaciones.
Bangkok y Phnom Penh reanudaron las hostilidades tras la muerte de un soldado jémer a fines de mayo, en medio de un tiroteo en la zona fronteriza disputada.
Diferentes medidas de represalia, decretadas por ambos bandos pese a los llamados a la calma, ya han afectado a la economía y el destino de numerosos habitantes en las regiones involucradas.
Por su parte, el Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores de Camboya denunció este jueves la «agresión militar» tailandesa.
Ambas naciones se acusaron mutuamente de abrir fuego primero el jueves por la mañana en las cercanías de dos templos disputados en la frontera entre la provincia tailandesa de Surin y la camboyana de Oddar Meanchey.
El primer ministro interino de Tailandia, Phumtham Wechayachai, afirmó que la situación precisa de «una gestión cuidadosa» y «dentro del derecho internacional». «Haremos lo mejor para proteger nuestra soberanía», dijo.
La embajada de Tailandia urgió a sus nacionales a salir de Camboya «lo antes posible», a menos que tengan razones urgentes para permanecer. China también instó a sus ciudadanos a salir de ese país.
El primer ministro de Camboya, Hun Manet, pidió una reunión de «urgencia» del Consejo de Seguridad de la ONU ante los ataques «no provocados, premeditados y deliberados» de Tailandia.
El enfrentamiento se dio un día después de que Tailandia expulsara al embajador camboyano y llamara de vuelta a su enviado en Phnom Penh, en respuesta al estallido de una mina terrestre que hirió a un soldado tailandés.
El primer ministro tailandés afirmó que una investigación del ejército de su país encontró evidencia de que Camboya había colocado minas terrestres en la zona disputada, algo que Phnom Penh niega.
Camboya rechazó estas acusaciones y aseguró que en las zonas fronterizas están todavía infestadas de minas activas de «guerras del pasado».
El jueves por la mañana, Phnom Phen degradó las relaciones con su vecino «al nivel más bajo», retirando a todos sus diplomáticos en Bangkok excepto uno y expulsando a sus equivalentes tailandeses en su territorio.
Estas son las hostilidades más graves en la frontera de ambos reinos desde unos enfrentamientos alrededor del templo Preah Vihear que dejaron al menos 28 muertos y decenas de miles de desplazados entre 2008 y 2011.
Tailandia,Camboya
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Fox News Politics Newsletter: A Big, Beautiful Clawback

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Welcome to the Fox News Politics newsletter, with the latest updates on the Trump administration, Capitol Hill and more Fox News politics content. Here’s what’s happening…
– Trump admin readies for fight after judges block Abrego Garcia removal for now
– Thailand, Cambodia troops open fire on each other, killing at least 12
– Senate Republicans call on DOJ to appoint special counsel to probe Obama-Russia intel
Trump Privately Signs $9 Billion Clawback Package of Spending Cuts
President Donald Trump signed into law his roughly $9 billion rescissions package to scale back already approved federal funds for foreign aid and public broadcasting Thursday, after both chambers of Congress approved the legislation earlier in the month, sources familiar to the matter have confirmed.
The signing marks another legislative victory for the Trump administration just two weeks after the president signed into law his massive tax and domestic policy measure, dubbed the «big, beautiful bill.»
The rescissions package pulls back nearly $8 billion in funding Congress already approved for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), a previously independent agency that provided impoverished countries aid and offered development assistance… READ MORE
President Donald Trump gives a thumbs up to reporters as he walks on the South Lawn upon arriving at the White House on Sunday, July 13, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (AP/Jose Luis Magana)
White House
‘LAWLESS AND INSANE’: Trump admin readies for fight after judges block Abrego Garcia removal for now
CLASH OVER AUTHORITY: Trump foe Boasberg to grill DOJ over migrant flights in heated hearing
REVERSING COURSE: Trump says he wants Elon Musk to ‘thrive’ after suggesting DOGE could investigate him
POWER STRUGGLE: Trump stands by Alina Habba as DOJ clashes with judges over her replacement
LEGAL SCRUTINY: DOJ forms Russiagate ‘strike force’ to investigate declassified Obama-era evidence
LEGAL SETBACK: Federal appeals court rules against Trump’s birthright citizenship executive order
‘I AM RECOVERING’: Pam Bondi cancels appearance at anti-trafficking summit over medical issue
World Stage
ACCOUNTABILITY TEST: Zelenskyy forced to rethink anti-corruption law after public backlash
MAN MACHINE MERGER: China experimenting with brain-computer interfaces in global race for AI dominance: report
BORDER BATTLE ERUPTS: Thailand, Cambodia troops open fire on each other, killing at least 12
BEACH BLAST: Battle over the Black Sea: Russia, Ukraine strike top resort cities

Russia launched a terrifying assault on Ukrainian Black Sea city Odesa, hitting a nine-floor residential building and destroying the iconic Privoz Market, which has existed since 1827, Odessa, Ukraine 7/24/25. (East2West via Ukraine Ministry of Defense)
Capitol Hill
EYES IN THE SKIES: Rules keeping drones on leash could loosen with deregulation proposal from Congress
COLLUSION CHAOS: Trump-foe Adam Schiff dismisses Tulsi Gabbard’s declassified Russia collusion intelligence as ‘dishonest’
BEG YOUR PARDON: WATCH: House Republicans zero in on Biden autopen pardons after bombshell report
EPSTEIN SECRETS: Jeffrey Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell to see how feds meeting plays out amid subpoena: brother
CREATING OPPORTUNITY: EXCLUSIVE: GOP proposal seeks to end ‘backdoor hiring practices’ at American universities
INTEL DECEPTION: Senate Republicans call on DOJ to appoint special counsel to probe Obama-Russia intel
BRIDGING THE DIVIDE: ‘Shirts and Skins’: How one Republican bridged the gap to pass Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’
NOT WELCOME: House Republican introduces companion bill to end China’s buying of American farmland
‘GOOD LUCK’: House to vote on censuring Dem rep charged in ICE facility incident

New Jersey Rep. LaMonica McIver was charged on Monday for allegedly assaulting law enforcement officers outside of an ICE detention facility earlier this month. (Getty Images/Department of Homeland Security)
KLAIN TO FAME: Ex-Biden chief of staff Ron Klain faces grilling in House GOP’s cover-up probe
ANTI-ANTISEMITISM: Pro-Israel Dem says those who won’t decry Hamas over Oct. 7 attack ‘have no business’ posing as humanitarians
FINDING THE FORCE: ‘Star Wars bar of leftists’: Weingarten, Hunter, Mamdani prove Democrat Party lead by extreme figures
Across America
‘SEVER’ CONNECTIONS: West Point Bible crest controversy spurs lawsuit from conservative watchdog
THE CHOSEN ONE: RNC Chair Michael Whatley to seek open Republican-held Senate seat in battleground North Carolina: sources
HATE SPEECH SILENCE: Dem governor criticizes Mamdani for not condemning ‘blatantly antisemitic’ rhetoric
WAKE UP CALL: Mamdani’s former Dem colleague rails against his signature campaign promise: ‘Nail in the coffin’
Get the latest updates on the Trump administration and Congress, exclusive interviews and more on FoxNews.com.
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