President Biden vetoed a bill that would repeal a National Labor Relations Board rule reclassifying franchise workers as employees of their parent companies, such as McDonald's, Marriott International and Taco Bill.
Rep. Henry Cuellar is professing his innocence ahead of an expected federal indictment.
An initial hearing for country music star Morgan Wallen was postponed Friday until August in a case in which he's accused of throwing a chair from the rooftop of a six-story bar and nearly hitting two police officers.
AI marks one of the biggest advances in military aviation since the introduction of stealth in the early 1990s, and the Air Force has aggressively leaned in.
Caitlin Clark will make her preseason home debut one day earlier than initially scheduled, Indiana Fever officials announced Friday.
The Food and Drug Administration has approved the use of the Apple Watch in clinical trials dealing with atrial fibrillation, a type of abnormal heartbeat.
Those scenes of pro-Palestinian protesters storming college campuses and battling with police reminded Al Sharpton of another event: the Capitol demonstration of Jan. 6, 2021.
The mission that day for Teal 53, part of the "Hurricane Hunters" of the Air Force Reserve's 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron, was to find some bad weather out over the Atlantic, the kind of bad weather most pilots spend their lives trying to avoid. Not only are the Hurricane Hunters the only such unit in the Air Force, they're the only ones in the world doing their particular mission.
A conservative think tank is raising worries about how a Biden executive order widens the gateway to Democrat voting.
The Pittsburgh Penguins fired assistant coach Todd Reirden on Friday, just over two weeks after the organization missed out on the playoffs for a second straight season.
Heavy rains in the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul killed 37 people, with another 74 still missing, the state civil defense agency said Friday, as record-breaking floods devastated cities and forced thousands to leave their homes.
Lawyers for a teenager who is suing two-time NBA All-Star Ja Morant over a fight during an offseason pickup game can withdraw from the case after citing irreconcilable conflicts with their client, a Tennessee judge ruled Friday.
Hope Hicks, a top aide to former President Donald Trump during his political rise, is testifying in her former boss' hush money trial about key players in 2016 payoffs to women and the fallout from the "Access Hollywood" tape before the election.
The Miami Dolphins agreed to sign wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. to a one-year contract, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press on Friday.
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem shot a dangerous dog. Democrats demand the right for women to abort their babies whenever they want, however many times they want, for whatever reason they want. These two things, while both resulting in deaths, are not mutually comparable.
A West Virginia judge has granted a temporary injunction sought by four middle-school girls who refused to compete against a transgender athlete, a decision that prevents school officials from barring the girls from track meets.
In the rough and tumble halls of Congress there's one thing a group of Democratic and Republican female lawmakers can agree on: the thrill of riding motorcycles.
Will Scharf, one of Donald Trump's lawyers, said the chance that federal prosecutors can hold a trial for the former president before the November election is "quite slim."
The United Nations and worldwide protests are supposedly concerned about the deaths of Gazans.
A tanker crash and fire on Interstate 95 in Norwalk, Connecticut, damaged a bridge and closed the highway near the accident site until further notice.
One of the two Black lawmakers briefly expelled from Tennessee's GOP-controlled Statehouse last year will remain on the 2024 ballot after overcoming a challenge from a Republican opponent.
The Eta Aquarid meteor shower, remnants of Halley's comet, peaks this weekend. And with just a waning crescent moon in the sky, it should be visible.
The U.S. accused Hamas of seizing a major shipment of humanitarian aid delivered to Gaza this week. The supplies were the first to be shipped from Jordan to the Palestinian enclave through a newly reopened border crossing authorized by Israel.
Stocks are rising on Wall Street Friday following a government report showing job growth rose modestly in April, a sign that persistently high interest rates may be starting to take a bigger toll on the world's largest economy.
The decline of our nation began at the universities, but now it appears it could end with them, too.