For someone who played a tough-talking executive on TV — “You’re fired !” — Donald Trump sure goes out of his way to avoid such confrontations. The real-life Donald, as president, typically had a hireling do the deed, sent a letter to the media or simply tweeted the news.
When President Donald Trump was searching for a new FBI Director after firing James Comey in 2017, he wanted among other things someone who looked the part of America’s top law enforcement official.
There is no doubt that Wray understands the threat that Trump and his henchmen pose to the country and the world
FBI Director Christopher Wray announced that he would resign shortly before Donald Trump reenters the White House in January.
WASHINGTON (AP) — FBI Director Christopher Wray told the bureau workforce Wednesday that he plans to resign at the end of President Joe Biden’s term in January, an announcement that came a week and a half after President-elect Donald Trump said he would nominate loyalist Kash Patel for the job.
The list of establishment officials weaponizing lawfare and pursuing destructive policies is long, but several individuals stood out — from career bureaucrats and corrupt prosecutors to former elected officials.
FBI Director Chris Wray is resigning several years before the end of his statutory 10-year term for one, terrible reason: Donald Trump had promised to fire Wray when he’s sworn
For someone who played a tough-talking executive on TV — "You're fired!" — Donald Trump sure goes out of his way to avoid such confrontations. The real-life Donald, as president, typically had a hireling do the deed, sent a letter to the media or simply tweeted the news.
Wray should have stayed and tried to uphold the rule of law for as long as he could. That is exactly what he is asking his subordinates at the FBI to do.
Christopher Wray's voluntary departure may help spare the agency from more of the president-elect's vitriol, but what message does it send to its employees?
The 30 Florida electors chosen to vote for Trump in the Electoral College are a who's who of Republican state leaders.
On 'The Stephen A. Smith Show', the sports broadcaster torched Democrats for misleading him on the January 6th Capitol riot. Smith said they made him believe that the right had a "monopoly on insidious,