Last year, the Republican congresswoman accused her ex-fiancé of sexual assault. It may have doomed her bid for South Carolina’s gubernatorial nomination.
Last year, the Republican congresswoman accused her ex-fiancé of sexual assault. It may have doomed her bid for South Carolina’s gubernatorial nomination.
An unsigned order in an Alabama case rewards the state for engaging in what a lower court called “intentional racial discrimination.”
The Trump Administration has chosen to honor the Semiquincentennial of a nation of immigrants with a vision that sends the country back in time.
What Graham Platner’s scandal-plagued Senate run says about a tired cliché.
Trump and Netanyahu are reshaping the region—just not as they imagined.
A runoff election, on June 7th, will decide which of two candidates—down from thirty-six, in the first round of voting—becomes the next Peruvian President. The economy may not notice.
The country’s emergence as an unlikely mediator between the U.S. and the Islamic Republic illustrates how diplomacy has become more personal and transactional under President Donald Trump.
Can one of the world’s most heavily armed militias be curbed without ripping the country apart?
Leo XIV’s new encyclical, “Magnifica Humanitas,” presents a remarkable case for placing moral concerns, and not profit, or competitive advantage, or efficiency, at the center of any discussion of artificial intelligence.
Trump says that a deal to end the war with Iran is imminent. On key issues, it’s back to square one—or worse.
Becky Hill, a court employee possibly trying to maximize sales of her book, pressured jurors to convict the South Carolina lawyer for the murders of his wife and son. Was she acting alone?
The President may have committed the rare offense that turns Republican lawmakers against him.
The outbreaks of hantavirus and Ebola expose the shortsightedness of America’s retreat, under the Trump Administration, from its role as a global-health leader.
Pennsylvanians who voted for the President last time around revisited.
In a recent speech, the Justice made clear that he views the movement, past and present, as anti-American.
Why has a Republican contest in Kentucky become the most expensive House primary of all time?
The Israeli Prime Minister’s government is bringing radical change to the country’s democratic institutions.
Their electoral prospects are finally improving, but opportunities can quickly give way to divisions. Does the Party have a plan?
The President’s talks with Xi Jinping, whose leadership style he seems to envy, yielded potential deals for airplanes and soybeans but no apparent agreement on Iran.
After a disastrous set of election results, the British Prime Minister’s authority is in tatters.
A law passed after Watergate makes Presidential records government property. The Trump Administration has declared it unconstitutional.
Pedro Sánchez, the Socialist Prime Minister, has led the European opposition to the Iran war from the start.
How President Trump’s approach to the war in Iran is turning endless conflict, interrupted by fleeting pauses, into the status quo.
Nearly two dozen kids were found at risk of abuse and neglect. Will their parents be held accountable?
After decades of false starts, a new rail line has opened along the city’s most congested boulevard.
Who would have thought that Leo XIV would make so much history so fast?
Drone attacks, internet blackouts, and a sudden downturn in the economy have led some prominent Russians to start openly questioning their President’s grip on power.
As the U.S.’s credibility and military capacity are tested abroad, China has gained leverage by staying out of the fight and learning from it.
For two decades, the conservative Justices worked to eliminate a bulwark of the civil-rights era.
Scientists said that an ailing humpback should be left to die in peace. A motley crew of privately funded rescuers disagreed.