This Week:
President Joe Biden defended his administration’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus stimulus plan and made it clear on Friday he is adamant to get it done with or without Republicans support. Jared and FOX News National Correspondent Mark Meredith discuss the bill.
The Biden Administration is making a big push for at-home coronavirus rapid tests. The administration announcing this week it’s partnering with Australian company Ellume which provides test results to your smartphones in 15-minutes. FOX News Washington Correspondent Rachel Sutherland speaks with Dr. Ali Mokdad, Professor of Health Metrics Sciences and Chief Strategy Officer for Population Health at the University of Washington about how at-home testing is a game changer for battling COVID-19.
What s True
Greene was enrolled at South Forsyth High School in Georgia in September 1990, when a fellow student held hostages at gunpoint. What s Undetermined
Origin
If you need help, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255. Or contact Crisis Text Line by texting HOME to 741741.
In February 2021, first-term Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican from Georgia, came under persistent criticism for her past remarks and actions, which included promoting and endorsing anti-semitic conspiracy theories, speculating that school shootings may have been faked in order to prompt tighter gun control policies, and apparently endorsing calls for prominent Democratic politicians to be assassinated.
So, now Mitch McConnell tells us that Marjorie Taylor Greene’s views are a “cancer” on the Republican Party and on the country. Odd that he neglected to m
Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, hoping to avoid losing her committee assignments, delivered an astonishing speech, declaring that she no longer believes in the QAnon conspiracy theory, acknowledging mass school shootings occurred and caused pain. She even had publicly accepted what has been reality, for decades, to virtually everyone: “I also want to tell you 9/11 absolutely happened.” The Georgia Republican didn’t attempt to explain, or apologize for, her past support for violence against U.S. political leaders. Her pitch didn't work.