Sen. James Risch, R-Idaho, discusses the controversy over President-elect Trump's nomination of Pete Hegseth on 'Cavuto: Coast to Coast.' 'DeSanta Claus' strikes again: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis ...
When President-elect Donald Trump takes the helm of the U.S. government in January, he'll face a more complex world than he did at the start of his first term, but he'll also have an ally atop the ...
Idaho’s James Risch, easily one of the most partisan Republicans in the Senate who spent the first Trump term defending the administration’s feckless foreign policy, has — so far at least ...
Over the years, numerous Cabinet nominees have withdrawn from the Senate confirmation ... opposing party.” Will Idaho’s two Republican senators, Mike Crapo and Jim Risch, demonstrate loyalty ...
Jim Risch questioning Former FBI Director James Comey before the Senate Intelligent ... Obviously the Republican senator from Idaho does not have a good understanding of what the president wanted ...
U.S. Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, right, appeared with U.S. Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, at the Republican Party watch event at The Courtyard by Marriott hotel in Meridian on Election Day. More than 40 ...
Idaho's two Republican Senators Mike Crapo and Jim Risch both signed off on Brailsford’s nomination via a process known in the Senate as blue slipping. Thanks in part to that strong Republican support ...
Prominent U.S. politicians, known to value the South Korea-U.S. alliance, have been named to chair the Senate committees on ...
When President-elect Donald Trump takes the helm of the U.S. government in January, he’ll face a more complex world than he ...
More than 40 years since the first American servicewomen were allowed to serve in combat, Idaho U.S. Sen. Jim Risch thinks the “jury’s still out” on how the U.S. military should manage women ...
WASHINGTON — When President-elect Donald Trump takes the helm of the U.S. government in January, he’ll face a more complex world than he did at the start of his first term, but he’ll also ...
More than 40 years since the first American servicewomen were allowed to serve in combat, Idaho U.S. Sen. Jim Risch thinks the “jury’s still out” on how the U.S. military should manage women’s ...