House Republicans let themselves get played by Democrats seeking to expand the welfare state.
There are ugly aspects of Hindu nationalism, but fears of a Taliban-like regime are nonsensical.
New documents bolster the theory that it not only escaped from a laboratory but was developed in one.
The Governor revives a 2.5% corporate surtax after only two months.
Students discuss getting support on rent and monthly bills from their parents.
The agency rewrites the law to invent a new offense: ‘shadow trading.’
Whether to treat them as machine guns is for Congress, not the ATF.
The city that claims to be a global financial center targets local contact with foreigners.
Treating Hamas and other proxies as discrete threats allows Tehran’s regional power to accumulate.
Instead, the agency keeps safe treatment out of the hands of patients with no other options.
A Texas student falls foul of his school’s grooming standards and makes a federal case out of it.
The murdered Alexei Navalny was his country’s best hope of resurrecting itself.
Taxpayers brace for another budget negotiation.
If universities in Norway are going to target Israel, they should pay a price.
If Congress fails to do so, troops could crush protests to begin a second term.
Competition can revive an industry stuck in the 18th century.
A bipartisan group offers an alternative bill to force a floor vote.
Democrats in Albany kill a bipartisan redistricting commission’s map to try to wring out more safe Democratic House seats.
Chair Lina Khan won’t let Kroger and Albertsons merge to become more competitive.
The pro-Palestinian Democratic left wants to force Biden to stop the war in Gaza against Hamas.
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