The Congressional Black Caucus remains largely supportive of President Joe Biden but concerned that the ongoing pressure may prove fatal for his campaign.
About 42 million people remain under heat alerts Friday as "dangerous and record-breaking" heat will persist in the West through Saturday, according to the National Weather Service.
A Japanese high court has approved a legal gender change for a transgender woman without requiring compulsory gender-affirming surgery.
New economic data showed that inflation in the U.S. continued to slow down in 2024 which could set the stage for a long-awaited interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve. The consumer price index rose 3% year over year in June. Editor-in-Chief at Investopedia Caleb Silver breaks down the latest on inflation.
NBC news medical contributor Dr. Natalie Azar joins TODAY with tips for avoiding heat-related illnesses, how to spot the warning signs of heat stroke and heat exhaustion, and how to make sure pets stay safe too amid high temps.
On Friday, a few thousand people are expected to descend on a 25-acre Mumbai convention center owned by Mukesh Ambani, the richest man in Asia, for his son's wedding.
Alec Baldwin defense accuses state of burying evidence, requests dismissal and sanctions
Video posted on social media showed a small plane come dangerously close to crashing into a Colorado mountainside.
Hackers stole six months' worth of call and text message records of nearly every AT&T cellular network customer, the company said Friday.
South Carolina Rep. James Clyburn, a key supporter to Joe Biden, sits down with TODAY’s Craig Melvin in an exclusive interview to talk about the president’s performance during a nearly hour-long news conference. “He has one of the best minds that I’ve ever been around,” he says. “I would hope that we would focus on the substance of this man rather than these sometimes-misspoken words and phrases.”
Biden, re-election, Project 2025, 'Vice President Trump', U.N. population report, Social Security COLA, Alec Baldwin, Rust trial, Russian assassination plot, Shelley Duvall
Monte Kiffin, the longtime NFL and college assistant coach whose Tampa Bay defenses routinely ranked among the league’s best, died Thursday.
Thousands of patients who were treated at two hospitals in Portland, Oregon, are being told to get bloods tests because of an "infection control breach" linked to an anesthesiologist that may have exposed them to HIV and hepatitis B and C.
A man armed with a machete attacked several people at the building where he lived in Switzerland, and four people were hurt, including a baby, police said.
There might be only one American who knows exactly what 16-year-old Quincy Wilson will be feeling as a youngster sprinting on the sport’s biggest stage.
When Sidney Watts first posted his thoughts about Project 2025 to his TikTok page in early June, warning of the “hell” he believes would come if the collection of far-right policy proposals came to fruition, he had no idea how it would be received.
A landslide swept two passenger buses carrying at least 60 people into a swollen river in central Nepal, and continuous rain was hampering rescue efforts.
Eyewitnesses watched in shock as a small plane almost struck the Devils Thumb mountain in Colorado. The aircraft later landed safely at its destination.
Prince Harry received the Pat Tillman Award for Service at The ESPYS on Wednesday night, and he mentioned the late Army Ranger’s mother who had criticized ESPN for honoring the royal.
At least three more House Democrats are calling on President Joe Biden to withdraw from the presidential race after his first solo press conference in months.
For nearly an hour Thursday night, President Joe Biden faced reporters and spooled out ideas shaped by a half-century in elected office.
NBC News' Peter Alexander recalls President Biden mistakenly calling Vice President Harris "Vice President Trump" at the start of his NATO press conference and breaks down his responses to questions on various important topics.
During his press conference, President Biden was reminded he referred to himself as a bridge candidate for younger Democrats in 2020 and was asked what has changed. Biden responded that the “gravity of the situation I inherited” changed.
When President Biden was asked whether his travel in the coming weeks will affect his decision to stay in the race, he responds, "I am determined on running." He says he plans to combat fears about his fitness for office "by letting them see me out there."
President Joe Biden vigorously defended his fitness for office in a high-stakes press conference Thursday evening, fielding several questions about his age and calls for him to step aside.