A dramatic conversation or two is often beneficial to investigative television journalism. CBS's 60 Minutes broadcast a clip from a media event with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis
T.J. Ducklo After his one-week suspension, Ducklo, a White House deputy press secretary, will not be allowed to have contacts with Politico journalists.
The suspects discussed the transport of heavy weapons to Washington, and even before Election Day, court papers said, they started preparing for urban warfare.
Mike Duffy's appeal of a lower court ruling that held the P.E.I. senator could not sue the Senate for damages linked to the 2013-15 spending scandal was rejected by the Supreme Court of Canada.
Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and other talk radio stars hosted shows supporting debunked allegations of a stolen election and encouraging fight back listeners.
Alabama's longest-serving senator, Senator Richard C. Shelby, will retire after a career in which he chaired four legislative committees and donated billions of dollars to his home state.
Veterans of the pro-Trump crowd who attacked it were taunted by military veterans seeking to protect the Capitol. In a divided world, both thought they were doing their patriotic duty.
An Alabama civil rights and criminal defense lawyer and a former Pennsylvania prosecutor best known for not suing Bill Cosby are putting together the former president's defense team.
Six weeks after a good performance review with the Premier, NSW's outgoing top transport bureaucrat Rodd Staples will earn a reward of more than $800,000 after he was fired without justification.
New state representative Erik Mortenson (R-55A) and the North Star Liberty Alliance are seeking to draft language to impeach Minnesota Governor Tim Walz
Border Patrol agents have released hundreds of migrant families into the United States. Thousands more are hoping to join under looser policies for a chance.
Manhattan U.S. attorney's office has made no effort to reopen the hush-money investigation that once plagued Trump's presidency and sent his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, to jail.
At a southern Ontario school board, an independent inquiry into claims of bias found trustees made derogatory remarks and pointed out a student trustee.