Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) disclosed Tuesday that the Justice Department notified him that former special counsel Jack Smith's investigative team "secretly obtained" text messages from 44 members of Congress without following the department's own filtering protocols, sweeping up communications from lawmakers who had nothing to do with any criminal investigation.
A Cuban refugee who fled Castro's regime with just $10 and a watch is warning Americans that the same poisonous ideology that stole his childhood is now gaining ground in the halls of Congress.
The Department of Justice unsealed a federal indictment Tuesday against three Russian nationals accused of running a criminal cyber network that drained more than $63 million from Americans in 21 states and targeted critical infrastructure including hospitals, schools, banks, and government agencies.
A China-born American seismologist has been held without trial in China for nearly two years, his family confirmed Tuesday, releasing new details about a case President Trump raised directly with Chinese President Xi Jinping just two months ago.
The Pentagon confirmed Tuesday that National Guard troops will remain stationed in Washington, D.C., through Inauguration Day on Jan. 20, 2029, nearly three more years of federal deployment in the nation's capital.
Kevin Warsh sat down in front of the House Financial Services Committee Tuesday for his first hearing as Federal Reserve chair. He didn't sugarcoat it.
Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) sent a letter to his Republican colleagues in both the House and Senate, outlining what the GOP must accomplish before the end of the 119th Congress.
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.
A stunning revelation about the Democratic Socialists of America has emerged: more than half of the organization's governing body openly supports communism, Marxism, or Marxist Leninism.
President Trump took to Truth Social to criticize Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-TX), stating that he never expected him to pursue the Democratic Party following his pardon.
Consumer prices fell sharply in June, posting the largest monthly decline in four years, but economists and federal officials warned Tuesday that renewed U.S. military action in Iran could quickly reverse the progress.
Republican South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster chose Republican Senator Lindsey Graham’s sister, Darline Graham Nordone, to fill her late brother's seat.