White House Deputy National Security Adviser Jon Finer, Steve Bannon, and Sen. Alex Padilla, Sunday on 'This Week' with Co-Anchor Jonathan Karl.
ABC News host Jonathan Karl challenged MAGA influencer Steve Bannon on President-elect Donald Trump's apparent focus on billionaires after promising to look after "the forgotten men and women." During an interview on ABC's This Week program,
Former Trump chief strategist Steve Bannon said tech billionaires attendance at Trump's inauguration is a sign of their "official surrender" to Trump.
Steve Bannon, a former adviser to President-elect Trump, called Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg a criminal during an interview on ABC’s “This Week” with Jonathan Karl. During a discussion about Zuckerberg’s and other tech moguls’ relationships with Trump and the fact that they will be getting prime seats at the inauguration on Monday,
ABC's Jon Karl hosts Mary Bruce, Rachel Scott, and Jonathan Martin to discuss tomorrow's inauguration of Donald Trump on "This Week" roundtable.
Bannon described the high-profile tech leaders who've embraced Trump as "supplicants" during an interview on ABC's "This Week."
Steve Bannon says this inauguration will feel very different from President-elect Donald Trump's first one in January 2017. And not just because it's moved indoors. "Bring the country together. Unify the country,
Draymond Green and Jonathan Kuminga have received promising injury updates that could provide the Warriors with much-needed reinforcements.
The ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel, announced by former President Biden in November, is now set “to be in effect until February 18, 2025,” the statement reads.
The White House said that a ceasefire involving Israel and Lebanon had been extended in a Sunday statement. The ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel, announced by former President Biden in
Former Chicago Blackhawks Jonathan Toews has not ruled out a comeback to the NHL after stepping away from hockey in August 2023 to focus on his health, "There’s a part of me that really doesn ...
The works explore a process familiar to Jewish visitors to the death camps and the former homes of vanished loved ones: an occasion to face the enormity of the Holocaust, the inheritance of family