President Biden issued a proclamation Friday ordering American flags on federal government property to be flown at half-staff to honor California Sen. Senator Dianne Feinstein, who died at 90.
Army Gen. Mark Milley delivered a full-throated defense of democracy and not-so-subtle swipes at former President Donald Trump during a packed ceremony on Friday as he closed out his four, often tumultuous years as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
American cyber officials are avoiding complaints from the Chinese government that the National Security Agency hacked into China's sensitive networks and stole intellectual property.
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy managed to avoid an embarrassing roadblock in his plan to avoid a government shutdown when lawmakers approved a test vote for the GOP's stopgap bill.
Three House committee chairmen delivered a final warning Friday to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, telling him to turn over details about terrorism suspects who've sneaked across the southern border or else they'll seek to issue a subpoena to force him to comply.
Montgomery County, Maryland, has a skyrocketing crime problem (particularly among its youth), its vaunted public schools are collapsing in quality, and everyone agrees it is a bad place to do business.
This may be a controversial take, but it is one that must be said: The Chinese Communist Party is worthy of being criticized. Dare I say, the CCP is bad.
The Biden Treasury Department issued its final rules on the new tax credit for developers who build “energy-efficient homes.” Some of the rules are not about energy efficiency but about electrification and solar panels, which means this law has all the normal flaws of green energy laws: It picks winners and losers and thus is certain to have counterproductive unintended consequences.
In an ideal election year, whether midterm or presidential, the right candidate would be compelling enough that no one would need to resort to choosing the best candidate out of two awful ones. Sometimes this is even an important strategy in elections rather than just a moral obligation. But 2024 could be shaping up to be another lesser-of-two-evils dilemma, at least according to Joe Rogan.