Pennsylvania state and local officials are scrambling after President Donald Trump’s administration ordered a temporary pause on federal financial assistance, a halt that could disrupt trillions of dollars nationally.
Allies welcomed Trump while there was some trepidation from Democrats who are concerned what policies might result from a second Trump presidency.
Then-Attorney General Josh Shapiro frequently sued Donald Trump’s administration during his first term as President. Will Republican Attorney General Dave
Newly inaugurated President Donald Trump ran on a platform of massive giveaways to billionaire oil and gas CEOs. Trump has pledged to roll back historic clean energy programs — transformational
Hannity described his and Trump's "friendship" as the president responded to soft questioning with claims about January 6, immigration, and the size of the 2024 presidential election victory. Despite the easy ride, Trump still peppered the conversation with a mixture of falsehoods that Newsweek's Fact Check team has assessed.
I believe there’s more that unites us as Americans than divides us —and as the Trump Administration begins its work, we must focus on the commonsense issues that bring people together to move our Commonwealth and our country forward.
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro criticized President Donald Trump for his pardons of about 1,500 people convicted for storming the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, including for violent offenses against Capitol police officers.
Some Pennsylvanians who traveled for Trump's inauguration were left out in the cold Monday, but they still had warm feelings about the new president.
Today, in response to the inauguration of Donald Trump as the 47th President of the United States of America, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro released the following statement Monday:  “For the 47th time in our nation’s history,
HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM ... He says it’s very troubling that President Donald Trump pardoned people who assaulted police officers and destroyed pieces of the capitol.
It marks the first time that all three Pennsylvania state row offices were filled at the same time by elected Republicans. They join Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro in Harrisburg.
As President Trump takes office, voters in the key swing states of Pennsylvania and North Carolina spoke with ABC News about what they hope Trump does over the next four years, and their hopes for America in that time.