Federal prosecutors charged more than 40 Georgians with participating in the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. President Donald Trump granted clemency to all of them.
In the hours before and after President Donald Trump once again took the oath of office; many Georgia politicians posted their thoughts online.
ATLANTA — A Georgia state senator arrested at the Capitol Thursday returned Friday. Hours later, the state House Speaker lifted the banishment that resulted in Sen. Colton Moore's arrest. Moore (R-Trenton) showed off a a bit of a bruise he said he got when a House staffer wrestled him to the ground and state troopers took him into custody Thursday.
Defendants from Georgia in the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riot have received full pardons from President Donald Trump.
before he was denied entry at the Georgia Capitol in Atlanta. Credit: AP/Jeff Amy Supporters said online that they were working to release Moore. Jail records said he needed to post $1,000 bail to be released. Moore was kicked out of the Senate Republican ...
Senate Republicans wasted no time in targeting transgender people on day one of the Georgia General Assembly’s legislative ... people who want trans Georgians and trans people in the United States to be pushed aside, Charles said.
A right-wing Republican state senator was arrested Thursday morning while attempting to enter the House chambers to attend the State of the State address by GOP Gov. Brian Kemp. Controversial Trenton legislator Colton Moore was handcuffed and removed from the Capitol by state police following an altercation with staff members and law enforcement as Moore
Donald Trump took the presidential oath of office for the second time Monday during an inauguration ceremony inside the U.S. Capitol rotunda. The swearing-in marked the culmination of a four-year journey for Trump,
The Democratic Party has so far been splintered in responding to President Donald Trump’s push against illegal immigration.
Salome Zourabichvili, Georgia’s fifth president, is on a mission in Washington to make her country matter to President Trump and his incoming team’s “America First” foreign
Over 200 Arkansans traveled to Washington, D.C., to witness Donald J. Trump's inauguration as the 47th President. Despite the cold, attendees enjoyed events, galas, and historic tours throughout the city.
A federal judge in Seattle has temporarily blocked President Trump's executive order to end birthright citizenship, calling it "blatantly unconstitutional."