House Speaker Mike Johnson reacts to Former President Joe Biden pardoning his family members shortly before President Donald Trump was sworn in Monday.
Outgoing President Joe Biden did not know what he was signing, House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a new interview, pointing to a conversation he had with the outgoing commander-in-chief in January 2024.
Mike Johnson said Congress will be "looking" into former President Joe Biden's pardons for his family shortly after defending Donald Trump's Jan. 6 pardons. The post Mike Johnson Vows to Investigate Biden’s ‘Disgusting’ Pardons Moments After Saying We Shouldn’t ‘Look Backwards’ at Trump Pardons first appeared on Mediaite.
The dust has settled, but Americans still don't know who really ran things in the Biden White House. It's clear it wasn't the president. Here are the five likeliest possibilities.
Speaker Mike Johnson said Wednesday that Congress will “look into” Joe Biden pardoning his family—but said Donald Trump’s clemency for Jan. 6 rioters was about “redemption.” The top House Republican also announced another select committee on January 6,
Mike Johnson said Biden has not "been in charge for some time" and even at a 2022 meeting, the president was unaware what was in his own executive order.
Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) summarized President Joe Biden‘s legacy as one of “catastrophe.” Biden gave his farewell speech Wednesday night, which prompted Johnson’s response on Fox News’
Americans have enjoyed periods of extraordinary strength and prosperity. The mandate of the 2024 election shows that our people are hungry for that again
The House speaker has reportedly bowed to Donald Trump in deciding to remove Mike Turner from his committee leadership spot.
While Biden tactfully communicated a fundamental truth and core party principle that’s been often overlooked, many felt that Biden delivering the message in the last gasps of his presidency was emblematic of his time in office: far too little, far too late.
For all the Republican talk about "looking forward," the new president and some of his allies appear preoccupied with the retired Democratic president.
House Speaker Mike Johnson says there "should probably be conditions" placed on additional federal aid to address the devastation from the LA fires.