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The Washington Times Front Page
The Washington Times Front Page
Author: The Washington Times
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The Washington Times Front Page Podcast delivers the top stories from our daily front page in five minutes or less, five days a week. Find all these stories and more at http://www.washingtontimes.com/frontpage
1414 Episodes
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On Friday's Washington Times Front Page: President Trump has fired Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, ending her mixed tenure and marking the first ouster from his second-term Cabinet, Russia has been quietly tightening its control over phones, internet access and social media for months, and more.
On Thursday's Washington Times Front Page: A U.S. submarine sank an Iranian warship in international waters as the Pentagon signaled that the war with Iran will accelerate, more states are expanding programs letting parents spend public money on private schools, and more.
On Wednesday's Washington Times Front Page: President Trump says the U.S. has enough ammunition to fight wars against Iran and others "forever," Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem tacitly acknowledged her overzealous denunciations of Americans killed by her agents in Minneapolis, and more.
On Tuesday's Washington Times Front Page: Trump administration officials pushed back on the notion that the U.S. is being dragged into another endless war in the Middle East, even as the conflict with Iran widened, the Supreme Court has stepped into the intersection of drug use and gun ownership, and more.
On Monday's Washington Times Front Page: The White House is open to talks with new leadership in Iran even after retaliatory strikes against Israel and other nations, a Capitol Hill showdown over war powers has deepened the Homeland Security funding fight, and more.
On Friday's Washington Times Front Page: Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton testified to a House committee that she has no information about Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking crimes, the U.S. and Iran have made "significant progress" in high-stakes negotiations to curb Iran's nuclear programs, and more.
On Thursday's Washington Times Front Page: President Trump's assertion that the U.S. wiped out Iran's nuclear program seems to be at odds with the facts on the ground, the Trump administration says it will reconstruct its trade system with durable duties that penalize nations for unfair practices, and more.
On Wednesday's Washington Times Front Page: Facing an electorate that polls show has soured on his agenda, President Trump tried to convince Americans in the State of the Union address that his policies have turned the economy around, Russia is pushing an unverified claim that Great Britain and France are working to provide a nuclear weapon to Ukraine, and more.
On Tuesday's Washington Times Front Page: Dozens of members of Mexico's national guard were killed in the violent aftermath of a military operation that killed a cartel leader, President Trump plans to use the State of the Union to make the case that he's lowered the cost of living, and more.
On Monday's Washington Times Front Page: The Supreme Court has delivered a message about clear limits to how far President Trump can go without getting Congress on board, after nearly a half century, the United States men's hockey team has won gold once again, and more.
On Friday's Washington Times Front Page: The Trump administration will withdraw remaining ICE and Border Patrol forces in Minnesota, universities across the country have received tens of billions of dollars from foreign governments and entities, and more. The Front Page will be off from February 16-20 and will return on Monday, February 23.
On Thursday's Washington Times Front Page: Attorney General Pam Bondi told Congress the Justice Department has active investigations stemming from Jeffrey Epstein, A Department of Homeland Security shutdown appears all but inevitaable, and more.
On Wednesday's Washington Times Front Page: The government's top immigration enforcers appeared before the House Homeland Security Committee to deliver their first defense after agents killed two American citizens in Minnesota, Democratic leaders in Virginia are moving ahead with gun control laws now that the party controls power in Richmond, and more.
On Tuesday's Washington Times Front Page: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer vows to fight for his job as calls grow for him to resign amid mounting controversy over his political ties to Peter Mandelson, more states are moving toward "bell-to-bell" bans on student cellphones in K-12 schools, and more.
On Monday's Washington Times Front Page: Some Democrats say they can't support a DHS funding deal if Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem remains in charge., the Trump administration has struck a legal settlement that ends one of President Biden's migrant parole programs, and more.
On Friday's Washington Times Front Page: Republicans have rejected Democrats' new proposals to reel in ICE, saying a 10-point list of reforms is too much, more than 120 million Americans are expected to tune in Sunday night for Super Bowl LX, and more.
On Thursday's Washington Times Front Page: The Department of Homeland Security will begin a drawdown of immigration officers in Minnesota, Ilia Malinin and Maxim Naumov are projected to be the breakout stars of this month's Winter Olympics, and more.
On Wednesday's Washington Times Front Page: The House narrowly approved a spending package that ends a four-day partial government shutdown, a U.S. fighter jet shot down an Iranian drone that "aggressively approached" an aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea, and more.
On Tuesday's Washington Times Front Page: The Department of Homeland Security has announced all immigration personnel operating in Minneapolis will be outfitted with body cameras, President Trump will meet at the White House with Colombian President Gustavo Petro, whom he has accused of trafficking cocaine, and more.
On Monday's Washington Times Front Page: The House may struggle to pass a second version of a funding package needed to end a partial government shutdown, the Trump administration is suing states that require eggs sold in grocery stores to come from cage-free hens, and more.



