The Make America Affordable Again Act
Every American who wants a better future and a stronger country should tell his or her congressman and senators to pass the Make American Affordable Again Act. It’s what the American people deserve.
Every American who wants a better future and a stronger country should tell his or her congressman and senators to pass the Make American Affordable Again Act. It’s what the American people deserve.
I truly hope that the Trump administration corrects the Biden administration’s mistakes, abandons the lawyer-dependent framework, and quickly gets these brave veterans the compensation they deeply deserve.
The Russian dictator is playing with and mocking us, so it’s time to make the war more costly for the Kremlin.
Newt talks with Jessica Jackson, CEO of REFORM Alliance about “Second Chance Month” and common-sense reforms to the criminal justice system.
Newt talks with Italian journalist and bestselling author, Aldo Cazzullo, about his new book, “The Neverending Empire: The Infinite Impact of Ancient Rome.”
The mood of the country will quickly turn from the despondency and lack of spirit so evident under President Biden to a new optimism. Hard working Americans will be enabled to create better futures for themselves, their families – and all of us.
Newt talks with Dr. Weifeng Zhong about the Policy Change Index (PCI), which uses artificial intelligence to predict the Taiwan Strait crises by scanning CCP propaganda media.
The fight over whether unelected federal district court judges should be able to unilaterally halt an elected President of the United States’ agenda has reached a critical point.
America is in the middle of an enormous crisis of construction failure. The collapse of California’s proposed high-speed railroad line between San Francisco and Los Angeles is a dramatic warning that something is profoundly wrong with the American infrastructure system.
Newt talks with Dr. Kevin Roberts, president of The Heritage Foundation and Heritage Action for America, about President Trump’s first one hundred days.