President Trump announced his support for Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton as the campaign against Democratic Texas Senate candidate James Talarico continues.
President Donald Trump walked reporters through the East Wing construction site Tuesday, offering the most detailed public look yet at what is being built beneath the new White House ballroom: a complex stretching six stories underground, equipped with missile-resistant steel, drone defenses, a military hospital, and bomb shelters.
Iran's latest peace proposal includes ending conflicts on all fronts, lifting the U.S. naval blockade, and demanding reparations from the U.S., reports indicate.
Amid reports of an Ebola outbreak in Africa, the State Department has shut down several embassies, while the CDC has paused people in the affected countries from entering the United States.
The Department of the Interior is taking steps to streamline the permitting process for oil and gas infrastructure in Alaska's National Petroleum Reserve.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche pledged before a Senate committee Tuesday that the Justice Department will not recommend a pardon for Ghislaine Maxwell, the convicted sex trafficker who worked alongside Jeffrey Epstein.
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.
In two weeks, California holds its June 2 gubernatorial primary. Sixty-one candidates are on the ballot. Republicans have consolidated behind two: Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco and Trump-endorsed political commentator Steve Hilton. Democrats have seven major candidates, none of whom has managed to break away from the pack. The result is a crowded Democratic field splitting its votes into thin slices, while Republicans stand a real chance of claiming both top-two spots and locking Democrats out of the November general election entirely. And now the left wants to change the rules.
Yesterday, the Supreme Court preserved telehealth and mail access to mifepristone while the legal battle continues. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito dissented. The 5th Circuit had ruled on May 1 that the Biden-era FDA regulation allowing the drug to be prescribed by video appointment and mailed to patients without an in-person visit was unlawful. The Supreme Court slapped a temporary stay on that ruling while it considers the case. The fight is live. The stakes are civilizational.
This week, the RNC launched a multimillion-dollar election integrity push across 17 battleground states. Poll watchers. Election observers. Legal directors with eyes on every vote cast and counted. Chairman Joe Gruters put it plainly: the RNC is "disciplined and ruthless," and it is all-in to make sure only legal votes count in November.
A Los Angeles woman has been charged with paying homeless individuals to register to vote after being caught on video by the O’Keefe Media Group’s undercover camera.
Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) introduced a bill that bans radical religious leaders, such as those backing Sharia Law and foreign clerics, from entering the United States.
Just days after American and Nigerian forces killed the second most powerful leader of the Islamic State worldwide, the two nations launched another successful strike against the terror group's fighters in West Africa.
The Pentagon announced Monday it is suspending U.S. participation in the Permanent Joint Board on Defense, the principal forum for bilateral military cooperation between the United States and Canada, after accusing Ottawa of failing to follow through on its defense spending commitments.
A New York judge ruled Monday that the suspected murder weapon and a notebook describing a plan to kill a health insurance executive will both be admitted as evidence at Luigi Mangione's state murder trial, set to begin September 8.