Angela Alsobrooks and Chris Van Hollen, wrote a letter Monday to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Acting Secretary Dorothy A. Fin on behalf of the Bethesda-based National Institutes of Health.
President Donald Trump's enormous popularity has broken establishment politicians' brains. Moreover, that same popularity has revealed that those politicians, mentally addled by their hatred of Trump,
Maryland’s Jamie Raskin learned he received a preemptive pardon from outgoing President Joe Biden just before he was set to attend an MLK Day event in Bethesda.
The abrupt pause in hiring, public communications, meetings and training workshops for some scientists at the Maryland-based National Institutes of Health since President Donald Trump took office
And he was telling the truth this time. Donald Trump and his team are overwhelming Raskin and the rest of the discredited Democrat political class with what Trump called a revolution of commonsense. Those executive orders and directives are the meat of it,
House Democrats are requesting that the Trump administration immediately clarify an executive order pausing funding for roads, bridges and other projects.
Though Biden, for his part, explicitly indicated that he did not consider the acceptance of his pardon to be an admission of guilt, House Republicans considered their mere issuance to be indicative of some wrongdoing.
MD Rep. Jamie Raskin hired psychologists to speak with House Dems about dealing with Pres. Donald Trump's "era."
REPRESENTATIVE JAMIE RASKIN, a Maryland Democrat, saying that Speaker Mike Johnson’s deferential relationship with President Trump diminishes the constitutional office.
A trio of Democrats on Monday called on the Trump administration to restore full operations at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) warning that the halt in the agency’s grant process could cause “disastrous” consequences domestically and abroad.
In a letter, three Maryland Democrats said they had "grave concerns" that Trump's move would do lasting damage
Two Maryland lawmakers reintroduced a bill that would create federal incentives for state and local governments to enact gun licensing laws.