Senate

Iowa and Utah Lead States on School Choice Progress in the New Year

As America celebrates National School Choice Week, two states—Iowa and Utah—have made the first moves this year to empower families with a greater say in how their children are educated.

Debt Ceiling Hysteria and Hypocrisy

This week the US government reached its 31.4 trillion dollars borrowing limit, better known as the “debt ceiling.”

Biden Blocked CIA Nominee in 1977 for ‘Carelessly’ Mishandling Classified Documents

"If [Sorenson] did so, can he now bring the activities of the intelligence community within the strict limits of the law?" Biden asked. "We will expect that in the future of intelligence agencies. If that is to be the case, then we must hold the director ... accountable as well."

Biden Continues to See Low Approval Ratings Despite Midterm Results

President Joe Biden witnessed some of the lowest approval ratings of his administration despite moderating price levels and the Democratic Party avoiding severe midterm losses, according to a new poll from Reuters.

DOJ Finds Six More Classified Documents Searching Biden’s Delaware Home

Federal investigators found more classified materials during a search of President Biden’s Delaware home — with some dating back to his years in the Senate, Biden’s lawyer announced Saturday.

IRS Having Trouble Hiring People Who ‘Are Able to Pass Background Checks’ After Biden Admin Calls for 87,000 New Agents

Out of more than 565,000 job applications received until early October, the IRS only recruited around 19,000 workers.

Minnesota Bill Legalizes Infanticide

Bill goes "far beyond any interpretation of the Minnesota Supreme Court case Doe v. Gomez," which is the state’s version of Roe v. Wade, legal experts say.

U.S. Treasury Buys Time for Biden and GOP on Debt Limit Deal

The U.S. government bumped up against its debt limit Thursday, prompting the Treasury Department to take “extraordinary” accounting steps to avoid default — as friction between President Joe Biden and House Republicans raised concern about whether the U.S. can sidestep an economic crisis.

Non-U.S. Citizens Can Police Americans in California

The previous requirement that these officers be U.S. citizens or permanent residents has been scrapped.

Latest news

- Advertisement -spot_img