As Kasie Hunt said on CNN after the service concluded ... which Carter lost to Ronald Reagan, can attest. Things always got ugly. But it did seem more civil, more respectful of the traditions ...
In an interview with CNN’s Kasie Hunt, former Georgia Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan reacts to being expelled from the GOP after the Executive Committee of the state’s Republican Party unanimously voted Duncan out.
Jimmy Carter's funeral was covered by all the networks, though Fox News cut away to LA fire coverage. Was Joe Biden's eulogy aimed at Donald Trump?
But the conditions that enabled his return to power have been decades in the making, beginning with policies first introduced by President Ronald Reagan. After the tear gas dispersed and the ...
How one of Donald Trump's now-favorite social media apps is looking for a Hail Mary to save it from being banned in the US. Israel confirms a ceasefire and hostage release agreement with Hamas ...
The deal between Israel and Hamas may already be under threat. Democrats try to find out just how loyal Donald Trump's pick for attorney general will be to the president-elect. President Biden ...
President-elect Trump, who takes office Monday, will see his swearing-in ceremony in Washington hit by freezing temperatures and winds of up to 30 miles per hour ...
On Friday’s edition of CNN This Morning, anchor Kasie Hunt and her panel — Mark Preston, Alex Thompson, and Brad Todd — were laughing it up over Trump’s Hollywood outreach when ...
Trump's Inauguration Day is expected to be the coldest swearing-in of a president since former President Ronald Reagan's second inauguration. President-elect Donald Trump in Phoenix, Arizona ...
Experts debate if a Gaza ceasefire deal that releases hostages could give Donald Trump a lift like Ronald Reagan's in 1981.
On Thursday’s edition of CNN This Morning, Bolton slammed Democrats and identified the three nominees he believes are “actually dangerous”: HUNT: Sir, while I have you, I also want to ask ...
For years, internet users have shared a quote about how to measure the success of welfare programs, attributing the words to Ronald Reagan, the former U.S. president and California governor.