District of Columbia U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro announced that the Department of Justice is ending its investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
A U.S. Army Special Forces master sergeant was arrested Thursday for using classified military intelligence to place winning bets on a prediction market just days before an elite raid captured Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro, pocketing over $400,000 in the process.
Conservative senators and outside groups are pushing back against a potential $500 million federal bailout of Spirit Airlines, pitting some of President Trump's closest Republican allies against the White House on a core question of free-market principle.
Republicans in the House are raising alarms over Rep. Tom Kean Jr. (R-NJ), who has missed roughly 50 consecutive roll call votes since March 5 without any public explanation from his office.
For decades, the dominant narrative around American religion has been one of steady decline, particularly among younger generations. Young men, often described as adrift in a post-industrial, digital-age culture, appeared to be leading the exodus from organized faith. Gallup and Pew data consistently showed rising rates of religious "nones" (those with no religious affiliation), with young adults at the forefront.
Virginia just joined the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, pushing the total to 222 electoral votes. This brings the left one step closer to effectively abolishing the Electoral College through the back door, without the constitutional amendment the Founders required. What sounds like a simple “one person, one vote” reform is actually a direct assault on federalism, the sovereignty of states, and the careful balance the Framers built to prevent raw majority tyranny.
As NASA successfully sent American astronauts around the Moon on Artemis II, the first crewed lunar mission in over half a century, conservatives rightly celebrated a bold, forward-looking achievement that recaptured the pioneering spirit of Apollo. Yet this moment of national pride throws into stark relief a grotesque disparity in how Washington and the states squander taxpayer dollars. One venture pushed the boundaries of human ingenuity for the benefit of all mankind; the other is a state-level vanity project that's devoured more money than it could ever justify, all while begging for federal bailouts on a matter of purely local concern.
There’s something almost surreal about watching rockets launch into the heavens while everyday Americans feel increasingly grounded; burdened by rising costs, cultural instability, and a sense that the world closer to home is unraveling.
The State Department announced that it is implementing specific sanctions to disrupt a "sophisticated transnational criminal network fueling America’s illicit fentanyl crisis."
The Justice Department’s Office of Inspector General will launch an audit into the department's compliance with a law dictating the release of Epstein-related materials.
New York City lost 114,000 more residents to other U.S. cities than it gained in 2025, according to a new study from the Citizens Budget Commission released Monday.
President Trump on Thursday ordered the U.S. Navy to destroy any vessel caught laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz, issuing a blunt warning to Iran as tensions in the region escalate into open confrontation.
The Senate voted 50-48 early Thursday morning to adopt a budget resolution that would allow Republicans to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol through a partisan reconciliation bill, bypassing the 60-vote threshold required to defeat a Democratic filibuster.