Tim Kaine, Mark Warner and American Airlines
Mark Warner and Tim Kaine each own a piece of the announcement from Donald Trump about the opening of an immigrant concentration camp at Guantanamo Bay.
Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine raised the red flag on increased air traffic around Reagan National Airport more than a year before Wednesday evening’s crash of an American Airlines passenger jet and a Black Hawk helicopter.
Senators from Virginia and Maryland said a near-miss at the D.C. airport in April should be a "bright red warning light flashing before Congress."
Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin took to X, formerly known as Twitter, on Wednesday night after the crash to announce that he had been briefed by the Virginia Emergency Management team and Virginia State Police about what happened. He said at the time that extensive resources were fully supporting the search and rescue efforts.
Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine raised the red flag on increased air traffic around Reagan National Airport more than a year before Wednesday evening's crash of an American Airlines passenger jet and a Black Hawk helicopter.
Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia warned federal employees on Wednesday to “think twice” before accepting an unprecedented White House buyout offer that allows workers who resign by Feb. 6 to receive severance paid through Sept.
Former President Trump’s decision to halt federal grants and loans threatens Virginia’s economic development, including Richmond's pharmaceutical projects. Senators Warner and Kaine condemned the move,
American Airlines has canceled all flights to Washington, D.C., from Norfolk International Airport. Impacted D.C. flights are being rerouted to Richmond. "Our hearts are broken for the families who must now process the grief of such a sudden and unexpected death," wrote Winsome Sears on X.
Air traffic controllers at Reagan National Airport faced heightened stress last night due to staffing issues, according to the Federal Aviation Administration (
Lawmakers have lobbied to add flights, while pilots have complained about the presence of military and other aircraft.
Sixty-seven people are presumed dead after a passenger plane on approach to Reagan National Airport near Washington, DC, collided Wednesday night with a US Army helicopter midair, sending both aircraft into the Potomac River below,