NPR's Michel Martin speaks with GOP strategist Tricia McLaughlin about how incoming presidential advisor Elon Musk helped hold up a federal spending deal, showcasing his growing political influence.
Michel Martin: The emails from your office to the ... Elizabeth Warren: Think of it this way… Elon Musk owns many companies, including Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink and X. The federal government ...
Mass., wants incoming presidential advisor Elon Musk to sign an ethics pledge. She speaks with NPR's Michel Martin about what she says are Musk's conflicts of interest.
Michel Martin: The emails from your office to the Trump transition ... Elizabeth Warren: Think of it this way… Elon Musk owns many companies, including Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink and X. The federal government has many touchpoints with all of those ...
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with GOP strategist Tricia McLaughlin about how incoming presidential advisor Elon Musk helped hold up a federal spending deal, showcasing his growing political influence.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., wants incoming presidential advisor Elon Musk to sign an ethics pledge. She speaks with NPR's Michel Martin about... Sen. Warren urges Trump to hold Musk ...
Live” host Martin Short joked about Donald Trump and Elon Musk in his monologue before singing about anxiety meds and making out with Jimmy Fallon.
A month ago, tech entrepreneur Elon Musk made very clear in a post on X that he wasn’t a supporter of the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II. Musk shared a video of a Chinese drone formation and offered his opinion,
The American public elected Donald Trump to run the federal government. His erratic patron seems to think the job is also his.
Martin Short kicked off his monologue for his fifth time hosting "Saturday Night Live" by joking that he had to get through it quickly, because "I have 10 sketches to get to where I play an elf." He then added: "Also,
Congress has approved a short-term spending bill to fund the government until March 14. President Biden signed the legislation on Saturday.
The third attempt to avert a shutdown comes as House Republicans have spent the week trying to balance President-elect Donald Trump's policy demands with the realities of Congress. The trouble for Johnson began when Trump and his top advisors, namely Tesla founder Elon Musk, trashed a bipartisan deal that died soon thereafter.