But by Tuesday, President Donald Trump’s decision to freeze $3 trillion of the nation’s spending seemed to put that money in jeopardy. So, too, is the money that Cleveland gives to its community development corporations,
CLEVELAND, Ohio - Ohio receives nearly $40 billion in federal funding. So what happens if President Trump shuts off spending? We’re talking about the wideranging affects of a federal freeze on daily life on Today in Ohio.
President Donald Trump blasted Fed Chair Jerome Powell and the nation's central bank Thursday, blaming their actions for inflation and vowing to unleash American energy production to bring it down
Donald Trump is now the second president to return to the White House after losing a bid for reelection. The first was Grover Cleveland, who ran a successful campaign in 1884 and 1892. I spoke with my colleague Russell Berman about his recent story on Cleveland’s legacy,
With President Donald Trump's signing of executive orders regarding immigration, here's what we know about how the deportation process works in Ohio.
President Donald Trump’s federal funding pause threatens more than $1 trillion that flows to states, cities and other local governments, putting everything from transit infrastructure to housing projects at risk.
They both won a second term after losing the previous election. But Cleveland’s second administration was such a disaster it put his party out of power for decades.
George Cleveland never knew his grandfather, who died in 1908. But with Donald Trump's return, Grover Cleveland is a big deal again.
President Donald Trump can’t overhaul immigration policy without Congress, but local law enforcement could expedite deportations and detain the undocumented.
Mark Franke is an adjunct scholar of the Indiana Policy Review and its book reviewer, is formerly an associate vice-chancellor at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne. Send comments to
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You can learn some interesting things about Trump by looking at his predecessors. Like some of them, he's savvy enough to turn to businessmen to get America back on track.
If you meet someone who's running for office, writes contributing columnist John Lindstrom, ask one question: Are you a grown up?