Steve Bannon mocks Musk, Zuckerberg and Bezos as Trump ‘supplicants’ making an ‘official surrender’ - Trump’s former White House strategist fires latest volley in MAGA civil war as he compares tech ti
They're not there because they support Trump. They're there because the Trump movement and President Trump broke them’ Bannon said ahead of Trump’s inauguration
Former Trump chief strategist Steve Bannon said tech billionaires attendance at Trump's inauguration is a sign of their "official surrender" to Trump.
Steve Bannon has intensified the MAGA civil war by comparing the sudden support for Donald Trump from tech titans Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos
The moment was Steve Bannon in microcosm: He's a devoted Trump supporter who ... Monday's attendees are expected to include three of the richest and most influential men in the world: Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and Tesla CEO and ...
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon has dubbed Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg a “criminal” and said he would be likely to betray the MAGA movement despite his recent efforts to woo the president-elect.
Bannon described the high-profile tech leaders who've embraced Trump as "supplicants" during an interview on ABC's "This Week."
I’ll tell you who I got to pay attention to it: Stephen Miller. I’d met Stephen and Sergio Gor, who are now huge players in the White House and were two grundoons on the staff of Michele Bachmann, who was eventually the person who did kind of try to run as a populist —
James Pogue is a contributing writer at New York Times Opinion, and he’s been covering the New Right at Vanity Fair. Over the past few years he has published great piece after piece on the MAGA intellectual scene and the various factions and ideas and people within it.
Billionaire Bill Gates attacks the world's richest man. Without mincing words, the Microsoft founder criticized Elon Musk for promoting far-right policies in the United States and
Three policy wonks dissect President Donald Trump’s executive orders on border security, immigration, government efficiency and beyond.
Despite rampant calls for members of Congress to refrain from active stock market investing while they are in office, members of both political parties remain routinely invested in the markets and re