Three major school districts are heading to Capitol Hill on Wednesday to answer for policies that critics say kept parents deliberately in the dark about their children's gender identity changes at school.
Federal prosecutors opened their case Monday against the man accused of igniting last year's Palisades Fire, one of the deadliest and costliest wildfires in California history.
Rep. Don Bacon (R-NE) on Monday publicly called on President Trump to withdraw his appointment of Bill Pulte as acting director of national intelligence, warning that the move is on track to kill a reauthorization of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act before the law expires.
The Department of Energy announced a "rebirth" of the nation's nuclear industry, as an advanced reactor design has successfully completed a criticality demonstration.
Medicaid was not built for able-bodied adults in their 30s and 40s who are simply not working. It was built for people who genuinely cannot take care of themselves; the elderly in nursing homes, children from low-income families, pregnant women, the severely disabled. That was the program. Then Obamacare blew the doors open. The Affordable Care Act created a brand new eligibility category: working-age, able-bodied adults earning up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level. Twenty million people were added to Medicaid under that expansion. The program that once protected the most vulnerable in America was converted, in part, into a no-questions-asked entitlement for people who could, in many cases, work their way out of it.
A federal prosecutor went public this weekend with something California does not want you to read. Bill Essayli, First Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California, announced that the state is actively blocking a federal audit of its voter rolls. The Department of Justice, led by Harmeet Dhillon, has been trying to obtain California's voter registration records for over a year. The legal authority is clear: the National Voter Registration Act, the Help America Vote Act, and the Civil Rights Act of 1960 all grant the federal government the right to review these records. California sued the DOJ back. A district court dismissed the federal case. The DOJ appealed. It now sits before the Ninth Circuit.
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."
The Trump administration denied entry visas to senior Iranian Football Federation officials ahead of the FIFA World Cup, forcing the Islamic Republic's delegation to base its operations in Tijuana, Mexico, while its players compete inside the United States.
President Donald Trump ended a recorded "Meet the Press" interview early Sunday after a heated exchange with host Kristen Welker, calling NBC "crooked" and disputing the network's handling of California's ongoing vote count.
President Donald Trump granted a full pardon Friday to former Rep. Stephen Buyer, a Republican from Indiana convicted in 2023 of insider trading, clearing a man who served as a House prosecutor at Bill Clinton's impeachment trial and who his supporters say was targeted by political adversaries.
The Department of the Interior said it would restore the gold-plated Arts of War and Arts of Peace equestrian statues located near the Lincoln Memorial.
President Donald Trump said Friday he expects his newly installed acting Director of National Intelligence, Bill Pulte, to downsize the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and remove employees he views as politically problematic, saying Pulte will operate "less shackled" than his predecessors.
The House Armed Services Committee voted 29-27 along party lines Thursday night to codify President Trump's effort to rename the Department of Defense as the Department of War, folding the change into the fiscal 2027 National Defense Authorization Act.
A federal judge on Friday struck down a slate of Trump administration immigration policies that had blocked the processing of applications for asylum seekers worldwide and immigrants from 39 countries, ordering U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services to resume adjudicating cases that had been frozen for months.