A White House news release details how the Trump administration is waging war on fraud, explaining the ways in which President Trump and Vice President JD Vance have unleashed an "unrelenting, full-scale assault on the fraudsters, scammers, and corrupt operators who have looted billions from American taxpayers."
Two Florida defense contractors face federal bribery and fraud charges after allegedly paying off a U.S. Army employee and inflating government contracts to pocket nearly $1.9 million intended for a military innovation lab in Hawaii, the Justice Department announced.
Senate Bill 948, introduced in February by Berkeley Democrat Jesse Arreguin, would require anyone buying a firearm in California to first complete a four-hour safety course with a certified instructor, then obtain a state-issued "firearms safety certificate."
President Trump arrived at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Tuesday for his fourth publicly disclosed medical examination since returning to the White House, which the administration described as an annual preventative dental and medical checkup.
Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) appeared on Sunday Morning Futures" with Jackie DeAngelis, condemning the former White House administration's response to the COVID-19 vaccines.
When Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth addressed the cadets at West Point, many Americans heard something that has been missing from too much of modern public life: moral clarity.
On Tuesday, Vice President JD Vance confirmed from the White House briefing room that the Department of Justice is actively investigating Rep. Ilhan Omar for immigration fraud. "I don't want to prejudge an investigation," Vance told reporters. "It certainly seems like something fishy is there." He made one thing unmistakably clear: "If we think there's a crime, we're going to prosecute that crime."
On Tuesday, the Justice Department added a one-page addendum to Trump's IRS settlement declaring the agency "forever barred and precluded" from auditing Trump, his family, and his businesses' past tax returns. Chuck Schumer called it a "get-out-of-jail-free card." Democrats across the country screamed corruption. The media ran wall-to-wall coverage about accountability and the rule of law.
The First Amendment protects the free exercise of religion. It protects the right to assemble. It does not require Christians to hide their faith to make progressives comfortable. There is no constitutional clause that says "except when the president is involved" or "only in private." The left has spent decades demanding that Christianity retreat from public life entirely, not because the Constitution requires it, but because the left is threatened by it.
The Supreme Court will issue more than a dozen major decisions before the close of its 2025-2026 term, with rulings expected on birthright citizenship, Trump's power to fire federal officials, election integrity, campaign finance limits, and transgender rights.
Pope Leo XIV released his first papal encyclical Monday, issuing the Catholic Church's most extensive statement on artificial intelligence and its threat to human dignity in the modern age.
Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) filed paperwork Monday to run for federal office in 2028, less than a week after losing his House seat to a Trump-endorsed challenger in the most expensive Republican House primary ever recorded.
Vice President JD Vance honored U.S. soldiers' sacrifices for the nation by encouraging Americans to ensure they are worthy of such action in a video shared on social media.
The Office of the Surgeon General under the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a report warning against the dangers of screen time for children and adolescents.
President Donald Trump honored the 13 American service members killed during Operation Epic Fury at his Memorial Day address Monday at Arlington National Cemetery, pledging that Iran will never obtain a nuclear weapon and calling the fallen "wonderful souls, wonderful special people."
Several Republican senators whose phone records were secretly subpoenaed during a Biden administration investigation say they will not seek compensation from President Donald Trump's newly created anti-weaponization fund, even as the White House defends the program as long-overdue justice for federal targeting of political opponents.