California's Democratic governor is promising to prosecute anyone who interferes with ballots or voters, declaring his state will serve as "the wall" that President Donald Trump "cannot get past."
The Department of War launched what it described as one of the "most highly anticipated apprenticeship programs in modern defense history" for cyber-related jobs.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has provisionally lifted the suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee, setting the scene for their return at the 2028 Summer Olympics at Los Angeles.
President Trump on Tuesday threw his support behind House GOP leadership's plan to pass key election integrity provisions through budget reconciliation, a maneuver that would let Republicans bypass the Senate's 60-vote filibuster threshold to advance proof of citizenship and photo ID requirements for federal elections.
The Stars and Stripes have once again become a target on daytime television, with "The View" co-host Sunny Hostin declaring that the sight of American flags flying in neighborhoods fills her with fear and signals white supremacy.
More than 1,200 former Department of Justice (DOJ) employees have urged the Senate to reject the nomination of acting Attorney General Todd Blanche as permanent U.S. Attorney General.
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.
Trump Accounts are now live. A thousand dollars, seeded directly by the federal government, deposited into a real investment account for every eligible newborn in America. Not a monthly welfare check. Not a coupon that expires at the end of the year. A genuine stake in the American economy, invested in a low-cost stock index fund, quietly compounding for nearly two decades before that child ever earns a paycheck or files a tax return of their own.
President Trump announced Tuesday he is lifting longstanding defense sanctions on Turkey, potentially clearing the way to sell advanced F-35 fighter jets to a NATO ally that has spent years locked out of the program.
The Department of Government Efficiency shut down operations on July 4, having spent 18 months dismantling what its backers called the most bloated bureaucracy in American history.
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed legislation Monday making the state the first in the country to require annual third-party safety audits of the nation's largest artificial intelligence companies.
The National Education Association is asking delegates to approve a $5.2 million campaign demanding President Donald Trump's "impeachment, conviction, and removal" from office before voters even head to the polls this November.
The House Natural Resources Committee Ranking Member Jared Huffman (D-CA) released a report that asserts President Trump "hijacked" the nation's 250th celebration.
A federally funded scholarship program handed out more than 600 awards over the past decade, and only 29 went to conservative students. Now Congress is stepping in.
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 former Georgia teacher, Michelle Mickens, has reached a settlement with the Oglethorpe County School District after it took action against her for a post about the death of Charlie Kirk.