A Week of Deepening Political Divides
Tempers are always flaring in Washington. But the current level of vitriol has felt especially nasty and intense. Source: Original News
Tempers are always flaring in Washington. But the current level of vitriol has felt especially nasty and intense. Source: Original News
In an interview ahead of her new book’s release, former Vice President Kamala Harris warned that President Trump would only grow more emboldened in crushing dissent. Source: Original News
The former national security adviser came under fire for inadvertently inviting a journalist to a Signal chat in which he and other top officials discussed war plans. Source: Original News
In the 1990s, he compromised with Democrats, backed abortion rights, increased spending for schools and used an income-tax hike to help tame a huge budget deficit. Source: Original News
During the standoff, authorities deployed tear gas and pepper balls at the demonstrators, which included several local officials. Source: Original News
A homeland security official said it was “contrary to our national interest to allow Syrians to remain in our country” through the temporary program. Source: Original News
The administration asked the justices to lift a lower court block on a policy requiring passports to reflect only the holder’s sex on an original birth certificate. Source: Original News
Will the Senate minority leader, the avatar of old New York politics, endorse the young, up-and-coming democratic socialist? Source: Original News
Trump officials told Erik S. Siebert that he was likely to be fired. He had hit roadblocks investigating New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, and the former F.B.I. director James B. Comey. Source: Original News
In his first comments since joining the Federal Reserve Board, Stephen Miran sought to emphasize his independence from the White House. Source: Original News