Politics
The Illinois Republican used his announcement to denounce "leaders that don't lead."
The ruling could challenge the Biden administration's plan to curb carbon emissions right after a key White House proposal died in Congress.
The Anti-Defamation League decried the "abject indisputable lie" of the "Patriot Purge" series.
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Former chief political correspondent Carl Cameron slammed the upcoming "Patriot Purge" as "really frightening" and "a betrayal to the audience."
Twitter users mourned “the death of irony” in the GOP following the conspiracy-loving Republican’s self-owning post.
The former Maricopa County sheriff has faced thousands of lawsuits over controversies such as jail deaths and immigration raids.
The Trump White House press secretary received some blunt reminders.
Threats and suppression of local election officials are the flip side of voter suppression, and they're discouraging people from even wanting the job.
Some U.S. bishops have said Biden, a devout Catholic, should be denied Communion due to his support of abortion rights.
The deal reached on Biden’s Build Back Better framework includes monetary penalties of up to $100,000 for employers who violate labor law.
Only New York and Rhode Island also have vaccine mandates for health care workers that lack religious exemptions.
Pence was too much of an "establishment guy" to ignore the results of a legitimate presidential vote, John Eastman said on video.
A Capitol Police strategy document predicted that it would be counterprotesters who would attempt to gain access at the U.S. Capitol.
Before Grant’s killing, a federal judge suggested his execution could provide evidence for a trial over whether Oklahoma’s lethal injection protocol is unconstitutional.
The paper said it printed Trump’s falsehoods without any kind of fact check because it trusts readers “to make up their own minds about his statement.”
"The record to me is pretty damn clear that there was a riot that was incited and encouraged and unleashed by Trump,” Rivera told The New York Times.
After Sen. Richard Burr dumped more than $1.6 million in stocks a week before the coronavirus market crash, he called his brother-in-law, according to a new filing.
"You stripped middle and lower socioeconomic of programs that would be life-changing and kept drug prices up and you think that's funny?" a Twitter user said.
Jeffrey Clark wanted to open a voter fraud investigation even after top Justice Department officials had found that there was no widespread fraud to probe.
The former New York governor resigned in August instead of facing potential impeachment.