California water regulators have said there's no truth to President Donald Trump's claim that the U_S_ military entered the state and “turned on the water.”
Donald Trump said the U.S. military entered California and opened a large flow of water to fight fires, but state officials denied those claims.
President Donald Trump claimed that the military entered California and turned on the water, but state water officials say the president's claim is false.
The California Department of Water Resources (CDWR) is pushing back on President Trump’s recent claim that the U.S. military entered the state and “turned on the water” in the wake of
The California Department of Water Resources on Tuesday rejected President Donald Trump ’s claim that the U.S. military “turned on the water” supply in the state. In a statement on X, formerly Twitter, the department said the military hasn’t entered the state.
California on Tuesday denied President Donald Trump's claim that the U.S. military entered the state to release more water in the wake of deadly wildfires.
As a rule, the president’s water-related preoccupation generates eye-rolling and easy jokes. Sometimes, however, it’s not funny at all.
President Donald Trump said Friday his administration is considering getting rid of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Trump lost more than two-thirds of the lawsuits filed against his rules in his first term. His win rate of 31% was lower than that of the three administrations prior, according to an analysis by the Institute of Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law.
From federal funding to the restaurant industry, Trump’s executive orders are having early implications for the region he’s expected to visit Friday.
President Trump and California Gov. Gavin Newsom met on the tarmac of the Los Angeles International Airport on Friday when the president arrived and committed to working together on wildfire receovery.
But the attack on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs that Donald Trump and JD Vance advanced at their press briefing Thursday—which was nominally in response to the tragic mid-air collision over the Potomac River Wednesday night—is foolish on its own terms.