The Trump administration on Thursday designated two additional Mexican criminal organizations as foreign terrorist organizations, expanding a list that now includes eight Mexican cartels subject to the elevated legal designation.
Five elderly Holocaust survivors stood in the Oval Office this week and offered President Donald Trump a traditional Hebrew blessing for health, strength, and leadership.
Rep. Keith Self introduced a bill this week that requires law enforcement agencies to obtain a warrant before collecting surveillance data from Americans.
Italian artist Sergio Furnari plans to unveil a statue of the late Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk in Times Square, an effort which he says has left him with threats.
The Trump administration fired a federal prosecutor in Seattle Wednesday within an hour of his appointment, after judges in the Western District of Washington installed him without White House approval.
A masked woman stands up at a housing event in Zohran Mamdani's New York and declares that "eviction is violence," making the landlord the new enemy and the tenant, the victim. The government, she insists, must step in and make the tenant whole, permanently, because paying rent has apparently become optional and collecting it has become a crime. It is a jarring scene and it is also not a fluke. It is the loudest, ugliest expression of a project that has been building in this country for two decades: convince Americans that ownership is a fantasy, that debt and rent are the new normal, and that the state, not the paycheck, should decide whether you have a roof over your head.
Gavin Newsom went on Axios this week and did what Gavin Newsom does best: talk down to a man who has actually built something. The California governor accused Elon Musk of "turning his back" on the state that supposedly made him rich. "Regulation in California created the conditions that allowed him to take the risk to become the multi-billionaire, maybe trillionaire, that he's become," Newsom said. "Now he's turning his back on the state that promoted him."
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.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday that Jan. 6 defendants who assaulted Capitol Police officers deserved to be prosecuted, while also declaring under oath that a controversial $1.776 billion "anti-weaponization" fund created through a Trump administration settlement is defunct and will make no payments.
A representative is planning to introduce a resolution to condemn the co-founder of the Yaqeen Institute for Islamic Research, Omar Suleiman, after he celebrated the death of Lindsey Graham.
President Trump's nominee to lead the nation's intelligence community, Jay Clayton, is now headed toward a party-line confirmation vote after he declined Wednesday to state that Joseph Biden won the 2020 presidential election during his Senate confirmation hearing.
Nearly the entire House Democratic Caucus signed onto a letter Wednesday demanding an "independent" investigation into two fatal ICE shootings, with 198 lawmakers calling on federal authorities to back off and let outside investigators take the lead.
A 12-year-old boy walked into his mother's bedroom and found a bulletproof vest sitting on the table. His mother is a Supreme Court Justice, and she had no idea how to explain why she needed it.
Three million pages. That's how many documents from Jeffrey Epstein's files the Trump administration has made available to Congress, according to Attorney General nominee Todd Blanche, who on Wednesday delivered a blistering rebuke of claims that the administration has been hiding anything about the convicted sex offender.
Communism has led to the murder of tens of millions of innocent people, and that same deadly ideology is now taking root inside America's own borders. That was the stark warning from House Speaker Mike Johnson during a press...
For the first time in American history, a sitting president will see his own likeness struck onto U.S. currency as the nation prepares to celebrate its semiquartcentennial.
The U.S. Mint announced it will begin production of a $1 gold coin...