Trump, GOP leaders meet at White House to defend executive orders as president plans to visit NC

Spread the love

Congressional Republican leaders met with President Donald Trump on Tuesday, and the president made some public comments after a White House meeting.

Senate Majority Leader John Tune of South Dakota and House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana are expected to speak to reporters about what was discussed in their first meeting with the new president since he began his second term.

Trump clashed with some congressional Republicans late last year as the federal government faced an eventual avertable shutdown.

Other Republican leaders at Tuesday’s meeting included House Majority Leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana, House Majority Whip Tom Emmer of Minnesota and House GOP Conference Chairwoman Lisa McClain of Michigan.

DeSantis cites ‘U.S. Gulf’ after Trump’s rebranding of winter storm order

Republican leaders of Congress met with President Donald Trump on Tuesday, January 21, 2025. (Fox News Digital/Trump-Vance Transition Team)

On the Senate side, Senate GOP Whip John Barrasso of Wyoming and Conference Chairs Tom Cotton of Arkansas and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia were part of the discussion.

As Trump signed a number of executive orders on his first day in office, he also signaled his willingness to work with congressional Republicans to pass key parts of the agenda through the legislature.

During a press conference following his meeting with Republicans, Trump mentioned the summit and his new executive orders to rename Mt Denali and the Gulf of Mexico.

President William McKinley said he deserved to be reinstated at the top of North America, where his Republican counterpart was known as the “tariff king” and presided over one of the strongest economies in American history.

Trump in 2016 Between 1870 and 1913, he declared, the United States was “the richest country” in the world. McKinley began his second term in 1901 when he was assassinated in Buffalo, New York.

Trump headlines first balls in DC

In the year When asked about pardoning criminals on Jan. 6, Trump agreed that it was never right to attack a police officer, but the press and left-wing opinion posthumously did not express the same concern for those involved in weeks of violence in Portland, Oregon, and Minneapolis. George Floyd.

Trump has called the Baltimore native “hot” and “a very stupid person” about getting rid of former Secret Service adviser John Bolton.

Later in the press release, Trump announced that he would visit North Carolina and California in the coming days.

Trump has indirectly referenced the Smoky Mountains region, saying that Democrats have abandoned the Tarhell state in a historic wave across America, particularly from Damascus, Virginia to Augusta, Georgia. .

Click here to access the FOX NEWS app

Trump led Democrats in Los Angeles wildfires and Democratic policy failures left the party “politically dead” in California.

“What they did was destroy (Los Angeles),” he said, referring to sprinklers without water and insufficient water and pressure.

“They either have a death wish[or]are stupid or something,” California leaders said.

On his way to California, he may face one of his longtime political foes in particular, Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who is now the state’s junior senator.

Similar Posts