Skip to content

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Trusted news at #1 place

  • Trusted sources
    • About us
  • Democracy matters
  • All of Trump’s decisions

Home - Real Clear Politics - Trump Bullish on the Economy at Pittsburgh Summit

Posted in
  • Real Clear Politics

Trump Bullish on the Economy at Pittsburgh Summit

by The editor•17 July 2025•Posted inReal Clear Politics

President Donald Trump and Sen. David McCormick (R-PA) announced $90 billion in investments in energy, technology, and manufacturing for Pennsylvania.

The editor
More by The editor

You might also like

How Democrats Lost Core Parts of Their Coalition in ’24

Hijacking the Fed

Chicago Has a Warning for Mamdani

Post navigation

Previous Article Previous article:
Trump on appointing special counsel for Epstein case: ‘I have nothing to do with it‘
Next Article Next article:
Logic Behind Trump’s Deportations Doesn’t Add Up

The Atlantic

  • How the Right Is Waging War on Climate-Conscious Investing

    A Leonard Leo-funded effort to destroy ESG has scared off much of corporate America.

  • Can This Man Save Harvard?

    To fend off illiberalism from the White House, the university’s president also has to confront illiberalism on campus.

  • Security Experts Are ‘Losing Their Minds’ Over an FAA Proposal

    The Trump administration is considering hiring foreigners as air traffic controllers.

  • The Supreme Court Won’t Explain Itself

    In their decision allowing the Trump administration to dismantle the Department of Education, the justices didn’t offer one word of reasoning.

  • How Putin Humiliated Trump

    The real reason the president suddenly sounds tougher on Russia

Talking Points Memo

  • Republicans Pass Trump’s Rescissions Package, Blindly Letting Exec Branch Claw Back Billions 

    House Republicans passed President Donald Trump’s $9 billion rescissions package Thursday night after Senate Republicans made minor changes to the...

  • White House Vindicated in Belief That Congress Will Blindly Hand Over Power

    With the House expected to eagerly place another rubber stamp on a legislative priority of President Trump’s — his attempt,...

  • Politics Reporting in the Gangland Era

    Covering MAGA and Trump is a bit like an old-time, hard-boiled detective novel. Everyone’s bad. Or at least shady. The...

  • Emil Bove Represents One Future of the Federal Judiciary

    It’s true: he won’t be like other judges. Emil Bove — whose nomination to a seat on the Third Cirucit...

  • Thanks, Folks

    Some time early this morning we made it past the $200,000 threshold in this TPM Journalism Fund drive. And that’s...

Fox News

  • SCOOP: House Republican campaign arm anchors Mamdani to potentially vulnerable Democrats

    NRCC launches aggressive ad campaigns linking vulnerable House Democrats to Zohran Mamdani's socialist policies following his surprising NYC mayoral primary victory

  • Republican introduces measure to ban autopen use when presidents sign certain items

    Rep. Addison McDowell introduced a proposal to ban autopen usage when presidents sign engrossed bills, executive orders, pardons, and commutations

  • Congress sends $9B spending cuts package to Trump's desk after late-night House vote

    House Speaker Mike Johnson secures victory as Congress approves $9 billion in spending cuts targeting international aid and public broadcasting in first rescissions package in decades.

  • Trump's modest spending cuts package survives narrow Senate vote as some Republicans break ranks

    Congress approves a $9 billion spending cut targeting public broadcasting and foreign aid, overcoming GOP divisions despite the cuts making up a small share of the budget.

  • Trump calls for immediate end to ‘unjust’ trial of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro

    President Donald Trump took to Truth Social Thursday evening calling for an immediate end to what he called "unjust" political attacks against former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro.

The Hill

  • Trump's big legislative week — and some warnings

    In the battle over President Trump’s spending priorities, Republicans say they’re running the table, leaving Democratic lawmakers and a tiny band of GOP critics in the dust. 

  • Airfare by algorithm: Delta leans into AI pricing — but is it a good thing?

    The price of your next flight on Delta might be determined by artificial intelligence.

  • Even Trump can’t quell the House GOP’s penchant for chaos

    While President Trump has managed to push House Republicans across the finish line on his top priorities, he hasn’t yet cracked the code on getting the narrowly divided chamber to overcome its penchant for chaos. After uniting in stunning fashion earlier this month to pass the GOP’s “big, beautiful bill” and celebrating the win, Republicans...

  • McConnell evolves from GOP leader to Senate wild card

    Former Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) has emerged as one of the biggest wild cards in the Senate, keeping his Republican colleagues guessing about how he’ll vote on elements of President Trump’s agenda. McConnell has been largely sidelined from important leadership-level discussions since he stepped down as Senate Republican leader at the end of...

  • Republicans face crowded field in race to lead House Homeland Security panel

    Four GOP candidates are battling to lead the House Homeland Security Committee, vying for a job that will put them at the center of President Trump’s immigration agenda. Rep. Michael Guest (R-Miss.) threw his hat in the ring Wednesday, joining a crowded field with Reps. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.), Carlos Gimenez (R-Fla.) and Clay Higgins (R-La.)...

Categories

  • Adventure
  • Architecture
  • Astronomy
  • BBC US politics
  • Beauty
  • CNN
  • Democracy matters – defending democracy
  • Fashion
  • Featured articles
  • FiveThirtyEight
  • Food
  • Fox news
  • Just security
  • Movie Stuff
  • NPR
  • Painters Matter
  • Politico
  • Politics Matters
  • Real Clear Politics
  • Talking Points Memo
  • The Atlantic
  • The Guardian
  • The Hill
  • Travel

  • Trusted sources
    • About us
  • Democracy matters
  • All of Trump’s decisions

Find Us

This may be a good place to introduce yourself and your site or include some credits.

Address
123 Main Street
New York, NY 10001

Hours
Monday–Friday: 9:00AM–5:00PM
Saturday & Sunday: 11:00AM–3:00PM

The Guardian

  • Tim Walz says Trump ‘brings out the worst in people – and the worst in me’

    Kamala Harris running mate strikes regretful tone after calling for Democrats to ‘bully the shit out of’ US presidentDonald Trump “brings out the worst in people, and he brings out the worst in me”, Tim Walz has said in a new interview in which Minnesota’s governor struck an apologetic tone over a recent plea for his fellow Democrats to “bully the shit out of” the Republican president.Walz, who was Kamala Harris’s running mate as she unsuccessfully ran for the White House against Trump in November, made those comments in a conversation with the Minnesota news station KMSP that was published Thursday. Continue reading...

  • Listen up, weaklings: there’s no Epstein client list – and definitely no cover-up. Yours, Donald J Trump | Marina Hyde

    It’s the bonfire of the Maga hats. The real mystery is where their wearers got the idea of a paedophile conspiracy from in the first placeYou have to feel for Donald Trump’s Maga base. The one huge secret they didn’t want disclosed was that he actually really hates them. All populists despise their people, obviously – but please, Mr President, respect the playbook! You’re supposed to do it quietly. Regrettably, no one could accuse Trump of hiding his spite under a bushel after a week in which he described those of his supporters who want him to simply do what he repeatedly promised, and release the so-called Epstein files, as “weaklings” and “stupid people”. This is quite the (public) volte face from the guy who originally swept to office declaring “I love the poorly educated”.Most of you are unlikely to need a recap at this stage, but Jeffrey Epstein is the sex-trafficking financier and socialite, who conveniently died in jail while awaiting trial, apparently by suicide. A woman, Ghislaine Maxwell, was convicted of conspiring with him to sexually abuse minors, and is currently serving 20 years in a low-security Florida prison. But no big-hitting or even small-hitting male associate in the US has so much as been arrested for participating in what I believe the dead paedophile would have encouraged us to call his “lifestyle”. This second Trump administration didn’t just sweep to power while repeatedly screaming about the “cover-up” of this story, but it spent a good portion of its early months assuring its ravenous base that Epstein’s supposed “client list” was on a desk waiting for release approval. Yet now, Trump and his associates say there is no list. Nope. Never even was a list. Where did these weakling idiots get that idea? To summarise his administration’s position: “We took a look at the deep state and it turns out to be very shallow. Seriously, I’m standing in it right now and it doesn’t even come up to my knees.”Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnistDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here. Continue reading...

  • Digested week: Tutting Trump and Maga fans send each other to Coventry | Emma Brockes

    Accusers in rolling ‘Epstein files’ revelations could do worse than take a lesson from departing parish priestRightwing American conspiracy theories often circle the drain of lurid abuse stories. So it was quite a twist this week to see the chickens of this particular rancid online conspiracy culture come home to roost in the form of Maga faithfuls turning on Donald Trump for what the US president now refers to as the “Jeffrey Epstein hoax”. Continue reading...

  • You may not know it, but the Democratic primaries for 2028 are already under way | Osita Nwanevu

    Every American presidential campaign is many years in the making. So, what’s the state of the 2028 primary race now?Every American presidential campaign is many years in the making. So, what’s the state of the 2028 Democratic primary race now? The Democratic party’s most eligible candidates for the next election have been scheming, climbing, wheeling and dealing for their shot at the ticket for years. Plans were being hatched for the cycles ahead well before Biden garnered the nomination for himself in 2020.Like that race, 2028 promises another crowded and wide-open field of contenders ⁠– polls have taken the Democratic electorate’s temperature on as many as 20 potential candidates, from Kamala Harris, who is reportedly considering a run for California’s governor instead, to the sports pundit Stephen A Smith.Osita Nwanevu is a Guardian US columnist. He is the author of The Right of the People: Democracy and the Case for a New American Founding Continue reading...

  • ‘Devastating’: US public broadcasters condemn Trump cuts to key programs

    PBS chief says cuts package ‘goes against the will of the American people’ as smaller outlets could face total closurePublic broadcast station leaders are condemning Donald Trump’s latest victory after the Senate approved a bill on Wednesday that will cancel all federal funding for public broadcasting programs including PBS and NPR.Following the Senate’s decision to pass $9bn in spending cuts to public broadcasting as well as foreign aid, PBS president and CEO Paula Kerger saying that the Senate’s approval of the package “goes against the will of the American people”. Continue reading...

Politico

  • The White House is frustrated with Susan Collins. She might be the GOP’s best option.

    Maine Republicans largely still support the state's senior senator — and know other GOP candidates face a tougher electoral path.

  • The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics

    Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the foibles, memes, hypocrisies and other head-slapping events in the world of politics. The fruits of these labors are hundreds of cartoons that entertain and enrage readers of all political stripes. Here's an offering of the best of this week's crop, picked fresh off the Toonosphere. Edited by Matt Wuerker.

  • Arizona Dems oust their party chair

    The chair, Robert Branscomb II, had been embroiled in intraparty drama.

  • Sen. Eric Schmitt praises Pam Bondi, declines to opine on Epstein case | The Conversation

    Sen. Eric Schmitt praises Pam Bondi, declines to opine on Epstein case | The Conversation lead image

  • Vote.org promised 8 million voters. Its founder says that was never the goal.

    The complaint, filed with multiple state attorneys general, alleges that high-profile voter registration group has engaged in financial mismanagement. The group denies the claims.

NPR

  • A look at how the debate over public media funding played out in Washington

    The House voted to approve President Trump's request to cancel funds for public media and some foreign aid. NPR looks at how the debate over public media funding played out in Washington this week.

  • Congress sends bill cutting public media and foreign aid funding to Trump

    House Republicans delivered a major victory to President Trump early Friday, passing Trump's rescissions bill that claws back $9 billion in funds already approved for public media and foreign aid.

  • White House says President Trump has a common circulatory condition

    President Trump has been diagnosed with a relatively common medical condition called chronic venous insufficiency that is affecting the veins in his legs, according to the White House.

  • ACA health insurance will cost the average person 75% more next year, research shows

    A new analysis shows that health insurance premiums for Obamacare are set to soar next year, as financial help that subsidized the cost expires. Congress is not likely to extend the subsidies.

  • How bipartisan support for public media unraveled in the Trump era

    "It will test every single shred of creativity we have to continue to try to serve our mission," says one public media executive, as Congress ends federal funding for public broadcasting.

Five Thirty Eight

  • What Americans Think Of The Biden Impeachment Inquiry

    Welcome to Pollapalooza, our weekly-ish polling roundup. It’s officially impeachment season again. On Tuesday, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced that he’s directing three House committees to start investigating whether President Biden benefited from his son Hunter’s business dealings overseas. McCarthy accused the Biden family of “a culture of corruption,” saying that the Biden administration

  • The Second GOP Debate Could Be Smaller, With Or Without Trump

    The second Republican presidential primary debate is less than two weeks away, so time is running out for GOP contenders to meet the Republican National Committee’s qualification criteria. To make the Sept. 27 debate, each candidate must have at least 3 percent support in two qualifying national polls, or at least 3 percent in one

  • The Senate Is Losing One Of Its Few Remaining Moderate Republicans

    On Wednesday, Utah Sen. Mitt Romney announced he would not run for reelection in 2024. On the surface, the electoral impact of Romney’s decision is minimal — his seat should stay safely in Republican hands. But it’s still notable because it represents the departure of one of the few remaining Republican senators who had a

  • Why ‘Bidenomics’ Isn’t Working For Biden

    Welcome to FiveThirtyEight’s politics chat. The transcript below has been lightly edited. nrakich (Nathaniel Rakich, senior elections analyst): For a long time, the economy has been seen as a big liability for President Biden in his reelection bid. Inflation soared in 2021 and 2022, culminating at a rate of 9.1 percent last June. The same

  • Why Biden Is Losing Support Among Voters Of Color

    Among the most politically tuned-in, last week saw the kind of hand-wringing and accusations of bias surrounding the polls that you’d usually expect from the final two months of a campaign, not the final year and two months of a campaign. The focus was largely on general election polls: Whether a Wall Street Journal poll

Food

Copyright © 2025 thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org.
Powered by WordPress and HybridMag.
  • Trusted sources
    • About us
  • Democracy matters
  • All of Trump’s decisions

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Trusted news at #1 place

  • Trusted sources
    • About us
  • Democracy matters
  • All of Trump’s decisions

bladibla

Scroll Up