Terminata la rimozione del nome di Donald Trump dalla facciata del Kennedy Center di Washington

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.ilfattoquotidiano.it/2026/06/14/kennedy-center-trump-rimozione-nome-notizie/8418782/

“Via il nome di Trump dal Kennedy Center”, la sentenza è una mazzata per il tycoon. Lui: “Giudice nominato da sinistra radicale”

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.ilfattoquotidiano.it/2026/05/30/trump-kennedy-center-rimozione-nome-notizie/8404171/

#ReproductiveRightsActivist #AlliePhillips is running for #Tennessee House District 75, and we thought it'd be a good time to remind you of her totally HUMILIATING #Louisiana Senator and all round terrible person #JohnKennedy. youtu.be/sP90WeZlWwQ?...

Witness DOMINATES John Kennedy...
Witness DOMINATES John Kennedy With Humiliating Fact-Check

YouTube

English – The Conversation | Why Kevin Warsh might still prove to be an independent Federal Reserve chair by Cristina Bodea, Professor of Political Science, Michigan State University

AI generated summary, Read the full article for complete information.

Kevin Warsh, now poised to be confirmed as the next Federal Reserve chair, has reignited debate over the central bank’s independence as lawmakers question whether he will act as a “human sock‑puppet” for President Donald Trump. Warsh’s record is mixed: once a hawk who advocated rate hikes and opposed post‑2008 crisis policies, he now supports the rate cuts Trump demands, and his deep ties to Wall Street—through stints at Morgan Stanley, Duquesne Capital and a Fed governorship—have raised conflict‑of‑interest concerns. Nonetheless, scholars argue that his finance background may actually reinforce his hawkish instincts and give him intrinsic motivation to resist political pressure, much as former chair Jerome Powell did, despite sharing a similar industry pedigree. As the Fed controls a $6.7 trillion balance sheet and sets rates that affect everything from grocery prices to mortgages, Warsh’s stance on inflation, the Fed’s “bloated” balance sheet, and deregulation will shape its autonomy from both the Trump administration and powerful financial interests.

Read more: https://theconversation.com/why-kevin-warsh-might-still-prove-to-be-an-independent-federal-reserve-chair-281720

#KevinWarsh #DonaldTrump #JeromePowell #FederalReserve #WallStreet #JohnKennedy #ElizabethWarren

Why Kevin Warsh might still prove to be an independent Federal Reserve chair

Kevin Warsh has come under scrutiny for his ties to finance, but that background may also bolster more independence once he’s confirmed as Federal Reserve chairman.

The Conversation

RE: https://mastodonapp.uk/@BBC6MusicBot/116557056744821627

I bought my ticket to see #TheMolotovs in January after hearing them on #xposure with #JohnKennedy I can't remember when or where it will be.

If anyone should get a motel room, it’s Senator John Kennedy and Donald Trump

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.advocate.com/opinion/john-kennedy-donald-trump-motel

Congress is broken — and the proof is in the timestamps. Senators are routinely voting past 3 a.m., half-asleep, on issues that affect millions of Americans. Republican Sen. Kevin Cramer calls it flatly: "The dysfunction is getting worse." In March, the Senate passed a DHS funding bill at 2 a.m. — only for House members who were literally asleep to wake up and reject it. The department remains unfunded. Leaders are governing by exhaustion, forcing votes in the dead of night to override objections. This isn't democracy — it's survival mode. https://apnews.com/article/congress-house-senate-overnight-votes-2641c2e758b1dd26eb6758bd00a8c0ac
#Congress #Senate #USPolitics #Government #Dysfunction #BreakingNews #Democracy #CapitolHill #JohnKennedy #BudgetCrisis
All-nighters in Congress create dysfunction after dark

Late-night votes are an age-old pressure tactic for congressional leaders in both major political parties. Yet overnight sessions have become increasingly common in Congress as the House and the Senate struggle to govern. Lawmakers say it’s a symptom of a broken Congress that often has to resort to extreme measures to pass major legislation and is often careening from one crisis to the next. In just the last few weeks, Congress has done much of its work in the middle of the night, leading to confusion and chaos in both chambers. Republican Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota says, “The dysfunction is getting worse.”

AP News