Governor Gavin Newsom (D-CA) is calling for the United States to adopt a national billionaire tax and a public equity fund ensuring that every American owns a part of what Newsom called "future being built by AI."
Former CIA Director John Brennan filed suit in federal court Wednesday demanding the Justice Department preserve all records tied to its ongoing criminal investigation into him, calling the probe an act of "unconstitutionally vindictive and selective prosecution."
The 9/11 Legacy Foundation will offer a free national curriculum to honor the memory of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks ahead of the nation's 250th anniversary.
Despite years of skyrocketing housing costs, office vacancies, and residents fleeing for greener pastures, Los Angeles and San Francisco have landed in the top five of a new national ranking of America's best cities for 2026.
The president who once boasted about replacing NAFTA now says he's "not looking to renew" the very trade agreement he negotiated, throwing $1.9 trillion in annual commerce with Canada and Mexico into chaos.
In June 2023, the city council of Hamtramck, Michigan voted unanimously to ban the Pride flag from public property. Every council member was Muslim. The city had recently become the first in America to seat an all Muslim local government, a milestone progressive organizations had celebrated for years as proof of multicultural success. Then that same council told Pride organizers "No."
When the Supreme Court agreed to hear Watson v. Republican National Committee earlier this year, election integrity advocates had reason for cautious optimism. The case presented a clean legal question: does the federal law establishing Election Day require ballots to be received by that date, or merely cast? On Monday, in a 5-4 decision authored by Justice Amy Coney Barrett, the Court answered that question in a way few conservatives anticipated—and the consequences will extend well beyond Mississippi.
The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued a ruling this week that should have been unnecessary to obtain in the first place. In a 2-1 decision handed down Tuesday, the court restored the Trump administration's authority to apply expedited removal to undocumented immigrants anywhere in the country, not merely near the border, reversing a lower-court injunction that had blocked the policy for months. The ruling is a legal victory, and it is the right outcome, but the fact that the federal government had to fight its way through multiple layers of litigation simply to enforce a statute that Congress passed in 1996 tells you a great deal about how far the judiciary has drifted from its proper role.
The crowd at 99 Scott Studio in East Williamsburg did not cheer the candidate's name when the race was called Tuesday night. They chanted something else entirely. "Free Palestine. Free Palestine." Over and over, filling a cavernous Brooklyn venue as Claire Valdez, the newly nominated Democratic candidate for New York's 7th Congressional District, took the stage to declare that her movement was "durable" and "growing" and would not stop "until working people run the table."
A professor at the University of Tennessee will receive nearly $2 million to settle a lawsuit after officials sought to remove her after she shared social media posts condemning slain Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk.
The American Founders would be appalled. That's the message from Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, who issued blistering dissents today accusing Chief Justice John Roberts of dragging the nation back to medieval serfdom with his majority opinion on birthplace citizenship.
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) has opened a congressional investigation into the U.S. Postal Service, demanding internal records on thousands of pieces of dumped mail, potential criminal wrongdoing, and millions of dollars in executive compensation paid while delivery failures mounted.
The Justice Department filed a civil antitrust lawsuit Tuesday against five of the country's largest egg producers, accusing them of secretly coordinating to inflate benchmark egg prices for nearly three years while American families saw grocery bills soar.
This was never supposed to be a hard case. The text of the 14th Amendment was written by men who had just buried six hundred thousand Americans fighting over whether a human being could be property. It was written to settle one specific question. Today the Court used it to settle a completely different one.