Two years ago today, a 20 year old named Thomas Crooks climbed onto a rooftop 150 yards from a campaign stage in Butler, Pennsylvania, and opened fire on Donald Trump with an AR-15 style rifle. Eight rounds later, Trump was bleeding from the ear, a firefighter named Corey Comperatore was dead, and two other rally goers were fighting for their lives. Trump stood up, raised his fist, and shouted "Fight." The image became instant history. What has not become history is the danger itself.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer on Monday warned of a government shutdown this fall if Republicans refuse to negotiate on defense spending tied to the ongoing Iran conflict, setting up another fiscal standoff weeks after the Senate lost two of its most powerful deal-makers.
A federal judge has left the door open for constitutional challenges against Virginia's sprawling network of automated license plate readers, even as the state quietly expands what the cameras can be used for.
The biggest names in tech already promised not to stick everyday Americans with the cost of their massive AI expansion. Now the White House wants utilities and data center developers to make the same commitment.
A coalition of 14 Democrat-led state attorneys general filed a lawsuit Friday against the U.S. Department of Education, seeking to block the agency from cutting school mental health grants the Trump administration has moved to terminate.
Conservative legal groups have called for Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan to face a Senate Judiciary Committee Investigation after she failed to recuse herself from a climate case expected to be heard in the Court's next term.
Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin defended the administration's decision Monday to condition federal counterterrorism grant money on states adopting a series of election security measures, including mandatory citizenship verification for voter rolls.
Gavin Newsom went on Axios this week and did what Gavin Newsom does best: talk down to a man who has actually built something. The California governor accused Elon Musk of "turning his back" on the state that supposedly made him rich. "Regulation in California created the conditions that allowed him to take the risk to become the multi-billionaire, maybe trillionaire, that he's become," Newsom said. "Now he's turning his back on the state that promoted him."
Standing beside Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Trump told reporters that Italy, Germany, and France had all declined to stand with the United States when it mattered most, during American operations against Iran. "In a way, I was testing people," he said. Most of Europe failed the test. This is not a firebrand moment. It is a reckoning seventy years in the making.
Drive through almost any American town this month and you'll see it. Porches lined with red, white and blue. Pickup trucks flying flags off the tailgate. Front yards turned into little tributes to the country's 250th birthday. To most people, that's just called patriotism. But according to a run of recent news stories, a growing number of Americans now find that same sight unsettling.
A Presbyterian minister stood before her denomination's highest governing body this summer and argued the church should not be allowed to require its own clergy to be monogamous. She called it "bad polity." She said defining love that narrowly was a wall the Spirit had already moved past. Her side won.
Sen. Jim Banks introduced legislation Monday to end birthright citizenship for children of illegal immigrants and birth tourists, using the very legal precedent the Supreme Court cited last month to rule against President Trump's executive order.
A federal judge on Friday dismissed the last remaining convictions against four Proud Boys leaders stemming from the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot, closing out one of the Justice Department's highest-profile prosecutions of the Trump era.
The Justice Department issued subpoenas Friday to four New York Times journalists who published classified details about security vulnerabilities on President Trump's new Air Force One, the Qatar-gifted Boeing 747-8 that entered service earlier this year.
U.S. Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker said Sunday that Iran is "controlled by a bunch of crazy people," as the Trump administration contended with a third round of military strikes against Tehran and Iran's attempt to close the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping.