Trump, oil execs and Venezuela
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When President Trump announced the capture of former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife on Saturday, he justified the military operation in part by framing it as a move to recover assets that he claims had been stolen from U.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Friday he was calling for a one-year cap on credit card interest rates at 10% starting on January 20 but he did not provide details on how his plan will come to fruition or how he planned to make companies comply.
Slovenian newspaper Dnevnik’s supplement magazine Objektiv took a bold artistic approach in its latest cover Friday, depicting President Donald Trump wearing a Venezuela flag pin and bleeding oil from his nose in an image that makes him appear similar to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler.
President Donald Trump discussed his plans to expand operations against drug cartels and touted his takedown of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro on "Hannity."
U.S. President Donald Trump posted a chart on his social media account late on Thursday that included job-market data that was not publicly released until Friday morning, a break with long-standing practice the White House said was inadvertent.
President Donald Trump insists he's never happy. But now he has a lapel pin that is. The president sported a tiny version of himself on his suit's lapel Friday, under the miniature American flag pin he and other presidents have traditionally worn.
Trump said that due to Venezuela's "cooperation," he has "cancelled the previously expected second Wave of Attacks" against the foreign country.
President Donald Trump drew fresh outrage over remarks about what he believes are the limits, or lack thereof, on his international power.
President Donald Trump has told Fox News host Sean Hannity that the US military may take its fight against drug cartels onto land.
President Trump welcomed the oil executives to the White House after US forces earlier Friday seized their fifth tanker over the past month that has been linked to Venezuelan oil.
The fate of the majority of President Donald Trump’s tariffs is in the hands of the US Supreme Court, which could rule as soon as Jan. 9 on the legality of the sweeping levies. Lower courts ruled in 2025 that the tariffs were issued illegally,