Viktor Orbán, Trump and Hungarian
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Critics of president Trump have branded Hungary's incumbent populist leader, Viktor Orbán, as a "humiliating defeat" for the Trump administration
18hon MSN
Snubbed by Trump, GOP candidates fighting for re-election act like they have his backing anyway
Republican incumbents facing primary challenges are leaning into Trump imagery in campaign ads, even when the president has endorsed their rivals.
Donald Trump has made a public flex of his political influence abroad on a scale that few, if any, U.S. presidents have, trying to marshal power he’s used domestically to sway races around the world.
Viktor Orbán faces a sweeping defeat in Hungary's elections, according to early results. Follow the developments.
Leo, who has been unusually direct in his criticism of the U.S. and Israel’s war with Iran, told NBC News that he had “no fear of the Trump administration” and vowed to keep up his appeals for peace that he said were rooted in the gospel.
This weekend's California Republican Party convention was poised to be a drama-filled event. The party held out a slim hope that its two gubernatorial candidates, if they played nicely enough, could lock Democrats out of the November election and reclaim statewide office for the first time in 20 years.
Career specialists have been pushed out and new political appointees installed across the agencies that safeguard federal elections.
The party declined to endorse his preferred candidate on Sunday, a rare rebuke of the president in the nation’s largest state.