Former President Joe Biden's Facebook and Instagram pages were archived after Trump took office Some Facebook and Instagram users discovered they were following President Donald Trump and Vice President J.
Meta is pushing back on claims from social media users who say they've been forced to follow Facebook and Instagram accounts belonging to U.S. President Donald Trump, his wife Melania Trump and Vice-President J.
Vice President JD Vance spoke with Margaret Brennan on Face the Nation Sunday about Pete Hegseth's confirmation, Tulsi Gabbard's upcoming confirmation, executive orders, FEMA, and more.
His comments reflect a long-standing allegations that tech companies exhibit anti-conservative bias. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Some Facebook and Instagram users were surprised to find themselves automatically following the accounts of President Donald Trump or Vice President JD Vance this week after the president was inaugurated.
Vice President J.D. Vance explained the president's decision to offer a blanket pardon to more than 1,500 people charged over the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot, during an interview with CBS's ...
If anyone drives in Middletown, they now know it is the hometown of Vice President J.D. Vance. The first sign honoring the vice president was unveiled Thursday, according to a social media post. As previously reported by News Center 7, the signs will read, “Hometown of J.D. Vance, 50th Vice President of the United States of America.”
Vice President J.D. Vance said big tech companies remain ... and accused Meta Platforms Inc. of unfairly banning him from Facebook and Instagram in 2021. Since he won reelection in November ...
With a general election in Germany looming, the spectre of Elon Musk is haunting Europe.
Vice President J.D. Vance said Sunday that he was “heartbroken” by what he called unfair criticism by America’s Catholic bishops of the Trump administration’s early moves to crack down on ...
It is true that Vance's book includes an anecdote about his grandmother setting his grandfather on fire. Vance also discusses this story in a filmed interview, where he said a family member told him he got one detail wrong: the type of fluid his grandmother used to set his grandfather on fire.