Gov. Gavin Newsom is attempting to criticize President Donald Trump's environmental executive orders by pointing to the recent deadly fires in Los Angeles.
President Donald Trump wouldn’t rule out investigating former President Joe Biden in a Fox News interview aired Wednesday.
whom former President Joe Biden named to his post in 2021, to accompany him in Los Angeles. Trump initial guest list doesn’t include Gov. Gavin Newsom or California Natural Resources Secretary ...
Trump fielded questions on the future of TikTok, his agenda in Congress, and a trip to North Carolina and California he will make later this week.
Until hours before California Gov. Gavin Newsom greeted President Donald Trump with a bro-hug on the Los Angeles tarmac Friday, his advisers had spent the week monitoring new White House advance staffers’ social media accounts,
Gavin Newsom signed two bills providing $2.5 ... How much money will flow back is not completely clear. Former President Joe Biden pledged the federal government would reimburse the state for ...
In his first sit-down interview since the inauguration, Trump called it ‘sad’ that Biden had not pardoned himself, spoke of abolishing FEMA, and berated California Gov. Gavin ‘Newscum.’
Since the fires broke out Jan. 7, Trump has accused the state of sending too much water to the Pacific Ocean instead of south toward Los Angeles. But the federally managed Central Valley Project doesn't carry water to the nation's second most-populous city and mostly supplies farms.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — President Donald Trump said he was considering “getting rid of” the Federal Emergency Management Agency during a trip to disaster zones Friday, offering the latest sign of how he is weighing sweeping changes to the nation’s central organization for responding to disasters.
Advisers to California Gov. Gavin Newsom spent the week monitoring new White House advance staffers’ social media accounts, hoping for clues for where President Donald Trump might be headed when he lands in Los Angeles on Friday afternoon to talk about the wildfire damage.
California lawmakers in the State Senate and Assembly unanimously passed legislation that provides more than $2.5 billion to help the Los Angeles area begin the cleanup and recovery process from the devastating wildfires.
President Donald Trump is threatening to withhold federal disaster aid for wildfire-ravaged Los Angeles unless California leaders change the state’s approach on its management of water.