A trove of emails between the justice department, the FBI, the National Archives, and the White House show senior aides to the president were being kept up-to-date on the investigation.
First quarter estimates of America’s economic performance are due Thursday.
The 1864 abortion ban may still go into effect this summer, however, because the repeal, if passed, would not go into effect until 90 days after the legislative session ends.
From social media to official government statements, the president’s unsubstantiated remarks — indicating backwardness in a Pacific ally — have raised anger across Papua New Guinea.
Afghanistan is seen as one of the countries least prepared to face the potential effects of climate change in the world.
Lawyers for Iranian rapper Toomaj Salehi say they plan to appeal the decision.
Protest votes in both parties on Tuesday signal discontent among some Republicans and Democrats towards their frontrunners — in a key swing state.
‘The freedom of expression on TikTok reflects the same American values that make the United States a beacon of freedom,’ TikTok Chief executive Shou Chew said.
‘Not only did the “foreign aid” bill that passed yesterday do nothing about the mass migration invasion of America, it provided over $3.5 billion to help bring migrants from the Middle East to America,’ Senator Rubio says in a tweet.
‘Today’s students are the leaders of the future, and their suppression today means an expensive electoral bill that the Biden administration will pay sooner or later,’ a Telegram post from the terrorist group reads.
March Federal Elections Commission filings show that his campaign did not raise or spend any money.
Nicole Mitchell, who was a rising star in the Minnesota state senate, is now facing calls to resign.
Do we want more insidious apps that tutor tots and help our children with their homework?
An angry missive to Washington from N’Djamena does not bode well — and could feed hungry Kremlin appetites, too.
Columbia University, my alma mater, reveres its 1968 student protest movement with oral history archives, anniversary celebrations, and professorships for participants.
Inspired by ongoing protests and the arrests last week of more than 100 students at Columbia University, students are now gathering by the hundreds on campuses, setting up tent camps and pledging to stay put until their demands are met.
The Taylor-Burton alliance is hardly a new subject, but Roger Lewis brings his own special form of brio to every page of ‘Erotic Vagrancy.’
Meantime the central bank seeks to palm off on the public the idea that its staggering negative capital is a ‘deferred asset.’
Can the prime minister’s new book — ‘Ten Years To Save the West’ — put her ahead of the coming crisis?
The proposed legislation would ban liquor stores, corner shops, and smoke shops from being open from midnight to 5 a.m. and includes fines of up to $1,000 an hour for violations.
‘The UAW may not find such an easy road at other companies,’ one analyst says.
Much of clean air progress can be traced to the increased use of natural gas.
Amazingly, small company chief executives are even more fearful of the future today than during the Covid pandemic, when most businesses were shuttered.
Speaker Johnson may have the top job, but the recent passage of the foreign aid bill proves that Congressman Hakeem Jeffries wields more power than any minority leader in recent memory.
Amy Herzog captures, with dialogue that feels bracingly, fearlessly authentic — and that is often very funny besides — how powerful love can be in the face of pain and loss and, just as significantly, the limits of that power.