Federal security officials are warning of drone incursions, potential lone-wolf attacks, and cyberattacks as the FIFA World Cup prepares to kick off across 11 U.S. cities next week, with the Department of Homeland Security acknowledging it is "struggling" with counter-drone capabilities heading into the tournament.
The Justice Department's Civil Rights Division announced Thursday it opened fifteen new investigations into potential race discrimination in medical school admissions, escalating a federal crackdown that has already produced findings against two of the country's most prestigious universities.
E. Jean Carroll said Thursday she "did not commit perjury," pushing back against a reported Department of Justice criminal investigation centered on statements she made during a deposition in her civil lawsuit against President Donald Trump.
The House voted overwhelmingly Thursday to reject a war powers resolution from Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) that would have required President Donald Trump to withdraw U.S. forces from Lebanon, with the measure failing 92-324 in a bipartisan rebuke.
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.
President Trump signed an executive order Wednesday stripping civil service protections from roughly 8,000 senior federal employees, converting them to at-will status under a new employment classification called Schedule Policy/Career.
Rep. Michael Lawler is calling for a congressional investigation into Adam Hamawy, the Democratic primary winner in New Jersey's 12th Congressional District, over his documented ties to convicted terrorist Omar Abdel-Rahman, the "Blind Sheikh" behind the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
The U.S. military struck a drug-trafficking vessel in the Eastern Pacific on Wednesday, killing two men it described as narco-terrorists, U.S. Southern Command said Thursday.
Former White House National Security Advisor John Bolton will reportedly plead guilty to unlawfully retaining classified information, according to reports.