Republicans in Congress have long been intent on countering America’s rivals and spreading U.S. influence abroad
As House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senator Lindsey Graham suggested Zelenskyy should resign if he doesn’t bend the knee the Trump, Zelenskyy was in Europe trying to negotiate real deals to save his country.
Some Senate Democrats have advice for Ukrainian President Zelenskyy: Don't rush into a rare earth minerals deal with Donald Trump.
If Donald Trump is under the impression that Republicans are united behind him on the war in Ukraine, he’s mistaken.
Social media erupted on Friday after a fiery exchange developed in the Oval Office between President Trump, VP Vance, and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Republicans in Congress are becoming increasingly hostile to NATO amid disagreements between the White House and European nations on Ukraine.
Foreign leaders rallied around Zelenskyy this weekend, but Trump still has the power to cause lasting damage to Kyiv's war effort against Russia.
“Everyone was giving him the same advice, which was get the deal done, don't play games and be very appreciative of everything that Trump and the administration have done,” said a person familiar with Zelenskyy’s conversations with GOP senators.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Key Republicans and Democrats in Congress have been stalwart supporters of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, but the blowup between the Ukrainian leader and President Donald Trump is threatening to change that.
Another senior Republican who had previously been supportive of Zelenskyy, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, seemed to make a dramatic shift. After a deal to give the U.S. access to Ukraine's mineral riches fell apart, Graham suggested that the Ukrainian president should resign.