Experts say it would be hard for Trump to revoke FEMA funding, but Congress could slow down California’s recovery.
It will be hard for the president to revoke FEMA funding. But a GOP-led Congress could slow down the region’s recovery.
As forbearance starts to rise due to the fires, servicers that have just gotten a respite from hurricanes recoveries will have to gear up again.
Put it all together, and you get something that looks an awful lot like systemic risk, threatening home values across the country.
Some of the most exclusive seats at President Donald Trump’s inauguration on Monday were reserved for powerful tech CEOs who also happen to be among the world’s richest men. That's a shift from tradition,
From California to Texas, Florida and beyond, parts of the U.S. most susceptible to natural disasters are slowly waking up to an underinsurance nightmare.
After 14 months of talks, Trump’s threats and his special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, played a major role in helping Biden officials reach the finish line.
Steve Witkoff, a New York real estate developer and investor, was reportedly instrumental in delivering the message to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Trump wanted
It will be hard for the president to revoke FEMA funding — but a GOP-led Congress could slow down the region’s recovery.
During the heat of the presidential campaign in September, then-candidate Donald Trump made an extraordinary threat. He vowed that if California suffered a wildfire during his presidency, he’d withhold disaster aid from the state unless Gov.
New Delhi and the world brace themselves for the America-first agenda that Trump, as the 47th US president, brings to the table in terms of trade and geopolitics
Mark Gongloff, Tribune News Service On top of the human tragedy they’re still inflicting, the Los Angeles wildfires are exposing a gap between what