President Donald Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance started a hectic inauguration day with a prayer service at St. John’s Episcopal Church, which is right across the street from the White House. That was rather expected,
Vice President JD Vance, along with President Donald Trump, promised to “break up” big tech while on the 2024 campaign trail. Months after winning the election, Vance was rather evasive about the plan when asked about it in his first sit-down interview as the nation’s vice president.
Vice President JD Vance, backed by Peter Thiel, criticized big tech's influence, stating these companies wield "too much power," despite prominent tech CEOs attending Donald Trump's inauguration.
While campaigning in August, Donald Trump's VP pick, then-Senator JD Vance (R-OH), told Face the Nation that big tech needs to be broken up.As the new U.S. Vice President, Vance returned Sunday t
Vice President JD Vance said Big Tech was very much still on notice on Sunday despite their presence at President Trump's inauguration and their million dollar donations.
Comments on Sunday by Vice President J.D. reflect a long-standing belief among conservatives that tech companies and social-media platforms exhibit an anti-conservative bias by trying to moderate content.
A group of federal judges in Washington, D.C., blasted Trump's pardons ... Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Google CEO Sundar Pichai. But when Vance spoke to "Face the Nation" in August, he said ...
The city’s Plain Dealer newspaper ran the cartoon by Jeff Darcy showing Vance standing ... change I support is my wife’s to ‘Senator J.D. Vance’s Spouse,’” the cartoon depicts Vance ...
Vice President JD Vance said Saturday that "we believe fundamentally that big tech does have too much power," despite the prominent positioning of tech CEOs at President Trump's inauguration last week.
Claims that Amazon founder and billionaire Jeff Bezos once said that he tells his employees to "wake up terrified every morning" circulated online in late 2024. Bezos did indeed once say that he ...
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All That Glitters
Historical greatness and a MAGA crack-up both seemed possible in Trump’s first week back in the White House.
In his first television interview as vice president, JD Vance defended President Trump on a variety of policies, including some he had previously second-guessed.