News

A statue of the first U.S. president stands prominently in London’s Trafalgar Square, but some Britons find it strange to ...
Darryl Nirenberg, a veteran US lobbyist and diplomat, was officially nominated by president Donald Trump for the position of ...
Come September, every public school classroom will be required to display the Ten Commandments — part of a larger push in ...
Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, contains the remains of more than 400,000 people from the United States and 13 other countries, buried there since the 1860s. More than three ...
Federal food aid is shrinking as SNAP cuts loom, leaving food banks bracing for a surge across the D.C. region.
The $9.4 billion Senate rescissions legislation is facing opposition on an array of issues, from public broadcast cuts to ...
There's a provision in the bill banning members of Congress and their families from profiting off stablecoins. But it does not extend to the president and his family.
Other Senate Democrats say the White House has not briefed them on its plans for a potential strike. And some are warning that the situation reminds them of President George W. Bush’s push to ...
As a candidate, President Donald Trump promised to end wars around the world – or at least end U.S. involvement in them – but ...
President Donald Trump rejected a plan presented by Israel to the U.S. to kill Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, ...
Authorizing foreign wars is the job of U.S. lawmakers, but recent presidents have stretched their own powers to engage in ...
When Hiram Rhodes Revels traveled to Washington in 1870, he brought a historic piece of paper with him: a handwritten document certifying his right to serve in the United States Senate.