A clash on Thursday between Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Kash Patel, the nominee for FBI director, set social media ablaze when conservatives ripped into the new California senator after what they saw as a win for the Trump nominee.
Schiff did have a noticeable mark on his forehead this week, which he addressed briefly in a clip he posted to X. The post ‘What Happened to Him?’ Trump Says It Looks Like Adam Schiff ‘Got Hit With a Baseball Bat’ first appeared on Mediaite.
Calif., during his FBI directorial confirmation hearing, particularly in regard to the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riots.
This week in the U.S. Senate, Senator Adam Schiff delivered remarks on the tragic wildfires that have devastated California.
Adam Schiff told NBC's "Meet The Press" that he ... the other pardons that were in focus this past week were of course those issued by President Biden as he was on his way out of the White House ...
As a congressman who led the first impeachment of President Trump, Mr. Schiff relished his role in the resistance. Now a senator, he must protect his state’s interests at a perilous time.
California Sen. Adam Schiff told NBC's "Meet The Press" that he's going to do some research about whether he can reject a pardon issued to all the people involved in the Congressional ...
CBS’ “Face the Nation" — Vice President JD Vance; Reps. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, and Jason Crow, D-Colo. “Fox News Sunday” — Sens. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., and Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.
FBI nominee Kash Patel said in his 2023 book that Adam Schiff was one of Washington’s “corrupt actors of the first order.” Thursday, Schiff, now a U.S. senator and member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, was given the opportunity to grill his detractor. And he did so, relentlessly.
Calif., on Sunday blasted President Donald Trump for his decision to fire 18 inspectors general late Friday night and accused the president of breaking the law.
Sen. Adam Schiff of California wanted to play nice with President Donald Trump on his trip to survey the wildfire devastation in California.
On the first week of Donald Trump's second presidency, we report from Washington, D.C., and the frontlines of fire damage in California.