"Today feels like a gut punch and it's going to get worse," Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren said after President Trump's inauguration.
Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass ... While his pick by President-elect Donald Trump was reportedly a surprise to many housing experts, he was the executive director of a White House interagency council in the first Trump administration tasked with overseeing ...
Senator Elizabeth Warren has asked US financial regulators and the government ethics office to probe the ethical and legal concerns around Donald and Melania Trump’s crypto tokens. “We write with deep concern about the decision by President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump to launch two memecoins,
As U.S. President Donald Trump took office in 2025, his inauguration celebrations were marked by controversy over a gesture made by his supporter Elon Musk that many people claime
Four days before Donald Trump's second presidential inauguration, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman shared on X a threatening letter he had received from Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) and Michael Bennett (D–Col.). In the letter, the senators expressed dismay that the tech entrepreneur had donated $1 million to Trump's inaugural fund.
Democratic lawmakers are asking federal regulators to look into legal and ethical questions around the meme cryptocurrency coins launched by Donald Trump.
The role of the modern-day inspector general dates to post-Watergate Washington, when Congress installed offices inside agencies as an independent check against mismanagement and abuse of power. Though inspectors general are presidential appointees, some serve presidents of both parties. All are expected to be nonpartisan.
The letter to federal regulators warns the TRUMP meme coin opens up covert foreign influence, urging regulators to answer the call.
President Donald Trump sacked at least a dozen internal government watchdogs late on Friday, US media reported, the latest shake-up of the Republican’s sec
Any level above $150,000 for Bitcoin would be "speculative fever," US SEC cancels SAB 121 rule, and more: Hodler's Digest
President Donald Trump fired more than a dozen government watchdogs late Friday in a move that appears to have violated federal law requiring him to notify Congress.