The CIA now asserts with low confidence that COVID-19 likely originated from a laboratory. The report, declassified under John Ratcliffe, points to China as the source despite deficient evidence. The ongoing debate on the virus's origin has domestic and global implications,
John Ratcliffe, Trump's pick to lead the CIA, has worked for AI companies and defense contractors since his time in government
Gov. Greg Abbott, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, business leaders and Texans tabbed for President Donald Trump’s cabinet gathered in Washington last weekend to discuss the new administration.
Donald Trump’s pick to head the CIA, John Ratcliffe ... cadets’ brain activity while they are in training. Another AI company Ratcliffe has worked with is Shield AI. In 2022, the company ...
The Senate on Thursday confirmed John Ratcliffe as CIA director ... he would push the CIA to do more to harness technologies such as AI and quantum computing while expanding use of human ...
The new order sets out to track down and review “all policies, directives, regulations, orders, and other actions taken” as a result of former President Joe Biden’s sweeping AI executive order of
A former federal prosecutor and Texas Republican, Ratcliffe gained prominence as a congressman as a staunch defender of Trump.
The U.S. Senate moved forward with the nomination of John Ratcliffe for CIA director, clearing the procedural hurdle with a 72-26 vote. This sets the stage for Ratcliffe's confirmation vote later. Ratcliffe previously served as Director of National Intelligence under President Donald Trump.
Vice President JD Vance has sworn in John Ratcliffe as the nation's CIA director, shortly after the Senate confirmed Ratcliffe on a vote of 74-25. Ratcliffe was President Trump's Director of National Intelligence in his first term.
Proud Boys founder Enrique Tarrio and Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes, the latter of which returned to Capitol Hill this week to meet with GOP lawmakers. Trump spoke virtually at the World Economic Forum in Davos,
The Department of Justice says it will "vigorously defend" Donald Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship, after it was temporarily blocked in a federal court earlier today.