Among those pardoned by Trump were 169 people who pleaded guilty to assaulting police officers, according to Sen. Patty Murray's office.
A federal judge put a temporary hold on the White House directive as Washington and 21 other states filed a lawsuit.
REPORT It’s an unbelievably sad Thursday in Washington, D.C. In this edition: Plane crash latest: DCA reopens, no survivors found.Trump blame plane collision on DEI practices.Tulsi
Wash., pressed Kennedy on past allegations of sexual assault from his family's former babysitter, Eliza Cooney, who claimed Kennedy groped her when she worked for the family in 1999. "You were accused of sexual harassment and assault by Eliza Cooney,
Trump’s budget office has rescinded his proposed freeze on large swathes of federal aid, capping off a whirlwind 48 hours in which the president’s push to rein in spending sowed chaos across levels of government that administration officials were left scrambling to contain.
During the Senate Democrats press briefing from Washington D.C. today, Senator Patty Murray lost it on President Trump over his federal funding freeze, which was announced last night.
The Trump administration reversed its policy to freeze grants and loans while officials evaluated whether spending met the president's priorities.
U.S. Sen. Patty Murray is slamming the Trump administration’s order pausing all federal grants and loans as a “brazen and illegal move” that would have devastating consequences for universities, cities, schools and other institutions.
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Democratic U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, vice chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, following the White House's withdrawal of an order to pause federal spending.
Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) is speaking out after Republicans blocked a resolution on Tuesday that would have condemned President Trump’s pardons for people convicted of assaulting
Sen. Patty Murray said the Trump order freezing all federal grants could have devastating impacts on university research, schools, police and other services.
Sen. Patty Murray, who chaired the Energy-Water Subcommittee for much of the last Congress, will remain that panel's top Democrat.