Trump administration officials say the Atlantic debunked its own story that senior security officials shared "war plans" in a Signal group chat that included its editor-in-chief.
This is part two of IndyStar's oral history recounting the national blowback to the Religious Freedom Restoration Act in 2015 ...
One in four US businesses has scaled back their hiring plans because of the turmoil unleashed by President Donald Trump’s ...
The fight over Waltz’s survival shows the administration is obsessed with reporters more than NatSac protocols.
Maryland's top leaders reflect on their first reactions and the response to the Key Bridge collapse, a tragedy that would ...
FBI inquiry into Heidi Poscher’s alleged attempt to influence a former City Councilmember. Poscher has since become a large ...
The Social Security Administration website crashed four times in 10 days this month because the servers were overloaded, ...
Trump said that even though the editor of The Atlantic was inadvertently added to a private chat about military plans, his ...
We don’t have people blocking the streets in Florida because I helped pass a bill that says you can run them over.
National Security Advisor Michael Waltz commented on the Signal text chain leak during an appearance on 'The Ingraham Angle.' ...
President Donald Trump on Tuesday downplayed the texting of sensitive plans for a military strike against Yemen’s Houthis ...
Despite calls for Mike Waltz or Pete Hegseth to resign, so far White House officials are bashing only The Atlantic. Here’s ...