Trump, Smithsonian Institution and slavery
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Washington, National Guard and Trump
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Trump, Washington and Europe
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Trump, Ukraine and US troops
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Welcome to the first weekend of President Donald Trump’s crackdown on Washington, D.C., which, serious as it has been, is just a prelude — and things could quickly get much more intense.
Federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C., will no longer seek felony charges for carrying rifles or shotguns. U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro cites Supreme Court rulings and constitutional rights in line with Trump’s law enforcement push.
The Trump administration’s crackdown on violent crime in Washington, D.C., has already netted more than 240 arrests and seized 38 guns off the streets, a White House official said.
North Korea is stepping up criticism of South Korea's new President Lee Jae Myung as he prepares for his first summit with President Donald Trump.
"The murder rate in Washington today is higher than that of Bogotá, Colombia, Mexico City, some of the places that you hear about as being the worst places on Earth," Trump said.
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The New Republic on MSNTrump’s DC Takeover Targets the Real Criminals: Delivery Drivers
The Trump administration has been snatching delivery drivers off the street mid-order as part of their sweeping federal effort to make Washington, D.C. “safer,” as multiple residents have reported. “Yesterday,
The Justice Department is appealing a lower court's ruling that a federal ban on drug users having guns can't be based solely on past drug use.
16hon MSN
DC's homeless response rife with years of mismanagement, wasteful spending amid Trump crackdown
A Fox News Digital review found that Washington, D.C.'s handling of the homeless problem has been fraught with issues for years before President Trump's crackdown.