This year's popular-vote margin is the second-closest since 1968 and still tightening. It shows just how closely divided the ...
Teens spend much of their days on their phones — many of them during school. Here's how schools and teachers are trying to ...
Retailers are warning Americans to be vigilant about their packages and not let porch pirates steal the holiday spirit, ...
The negotiations in Busan, South Korea, were supposed to be the fifth and final round to produce the first legally binding ...
Filmmaker and conservative pundit Dinesh D'Souza has issued a statement saying "inaccurate information" was provided to him ...
The focal point of the case is 2009 law enacted by Congress that gives the Food and Drug Administration a mandate to curb the ...
More than 300 volunteers spent the past week decorating the White House's public spaces and its 83 Christmas trees with ...
Richard Dayoub from Thunderbird Management welcomes Anthony Tomasheski, the CEO of the Boys & Girls Clubs in El Paso, to talk ...
President Biden has pardoned his son Hunter Biden, who he says was "selectively and unfairly prosecuted." And, a look into ...
Syrian rebels have swept through parts of the country at lightning pace, taking control of the the second-largest city, ...
Biden is now the third president to pardon a relative, after Bill Clinton and Donald Trump. Here's a look at the commonplace — yet often controversial — presidential power.
NPR's Ari Shapiro examines the substance behind and implications of President Joe Biden's pardon of his son Hunter. He did so with just weeks left in his presidency after repeatedly promising not to.