Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado said he will not join the Democratic filibuster of Neil Gorsuch's confirmation to the U.S. Supreme Court, warning the effort will "only further politicize the Supreme Court and prevent the Senate from blocking more extreme judges in the future."
Sen. Lindsey Graham said Monday that GOP leaders will go "nuclear" to overcome a filibuster of Neil Gorsuch's nomination to the Supreme Court and blamed Democrats for turning the confirmation of judges into a purely partisan exercise.
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse said Monday that if Neil Gorsuch wins confirmation to the Supreme Court it will ensure that "dark money" continues to have a negative influence on American politics.
The chairman of the House Oversight Committee said Monday that former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn could have to pay back the tens of thousands of dollars that he has received from Russia and Turkey.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal said Monday that he doesn't believe there is enough support in the Senate for Judge Neil Gorsuch to overcome a Democratic filibuster of his nomination to the Supreme Court.
President Trump kicked off the week by floating a couple questions about Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and her political allies -- including the former chairman of her presidential campaign.
Former Florida Rep. Joe Scarborough said Monday his pet rock could have toppled Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election, thanks to all the baggage she carried into the contest.
Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon said Friday that Democrats should follow through on their plans to filibuster the nomination of Judge Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court, in response to cracks that are emerging in his party's opposition to the pick.
Rep. Thomas Massie isn't worried about President Trump coming after him in a primary election over his opposition to the health care bill that sputtered out last week in the House, saying the commander-in-chief is "burning political capital" by listening to members of the establishment and attacking conservatives that want to help him deliver on his promise to "drain the swamp."
President Trump on Friday supported his former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn's request for immunity in exchange for testifying before the FBI and Congress into Russian meddling in the 2016 election and possible collusion with the Trump campaign.
Sen. Angus King said Friday it is "premature" to say whether the Senate Intelligence Committee would offer Michael Flynn immunity in exchange for his testimony before the panel as part of its probe into Russia's interference in the U.S. election and possible collusion with the Donald Trump's presidential campaign.
A former chairman of the House Intelligence Committee warned Friday against Congress giving former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn immunity in exchange for testimony, saying he is concerned it could get in the way of an ongoing FBI investigation.
The co-founder of a national tea party group said Thursday that she hopes President Trump will come to the realization that the members of the House Freedom Caucus that helped sink the GOP's health care bill last week are trying to help him deliver on a campaign promise.
A group of House Republicans on Thursday introduced the first major bill to fund President Trump's border wall, saying the government could collect billions of dollars by imposing a 2 percent fee on all the money Mexicans and other immigrants send back home.
Sen. Marco Rubio was told at a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Thursday that he was the target of Russian propaganda efforts in the 2016 presidential race.
Rep. Justin Amash rebuked President Trump's criticism of the House Freedom Caucus by suggesting the Republican has been brainwashed by the Washington establishment.
Rep. Dave Brat of Virginia said that the health care bill that President Trump tried to push through Congress would not have fulfilled the campaign promise to "drain the swamp" that both Mr. Trump and members of the House Freedom Caucus ran on in the 2016 election.
A founding member of the House Freedom Caucus said Thursday he is not interested in getting involved in a blame game over the failure of Republicans to replace Obamacare after President Trump declared war on the group.
Sen. Lindsey Graham said members of the House Freedom Caucus could be better "teammates" after learning that President Trump declared war on the group of conservative Republican lawmakers.