The president’s attacks on his predecessor may be intended to discredit the results of any inquiry into his 2016 campaign’s contacts with Russian officials.
The psychological roots of liberals’ Trump depression—and what comes next.
Florida has already pulled panthers back from the brink of extinction—but to keep them alive, people will have to be comfortable with one showing up on their back porch.
The GOP’s Obamacare-replacement plan, retaliatory steps from North Korea and Malaysia, and more from the United States and around the world.
Though most old and sick people will be worse off under the GOP bill, it might be a boon—real or perceived—for people earning just above the Obamacare subsidy cutoff.
You've probably heard about your gut bacteria—now get to know your gut archaea.
Indulging the president, top Republicans say they’ll look into his charge against Obama, but it won’t substantially alter their probe into Russian meddling in the election.
The Democratic Party has lost power at the national level and in state legislatures. Even so, Ruy Teixeira argues that liberals should feel hopeful about the future.
House Republicans introduced their Obamacare repeal and replace legislation, Trump signs a new executive order on immigration, and more from the United States and around the world.
The new GOP proposal drew immediate criticism from lawmakers who argued it doesn’t go far enough in erasing the Affordable Care Act.
What’s in the House Republicans’ new plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act?
Trump’s new travel ban, the GOP’s health-care plan, campus violence, and more.
The rapper is spending his good will—and $1 million in ticket sales—on Chicago Public Schools.
President Trump signed a new executive order on immigration.
The Trump administration hasn’t even faced a major foreign-policy challenge yet.
The Donald Trump conspiracy-theory feedback loop is only going to get worse.
The musician and executive producer of the WGN historical drama discusses the contemporary relevance of telling marginalized stories.
That’s the question that reader John Harris has been asking himself lately. He’s not alone: In 1862, one of The…
About two weeks ago, Iraqi government troops began to push into the western half of ISIS-occupied Mosul, after securing the eastern side.
The show feels less urgent whenever it presents members of the Trump administration as brainless simpletons.
There’s a psychological reason that people like to tweet pictures of cute animals with their political opinions.
Unlike a conventional military strike, state-on-state cyberattacks can go unreported for years.
A new retrospective looks at a group of young photographers who infiltrated academic slide libraries with radical images of a changing city.
Rolling back Obamacare will require full Republican support in the Senate. Rand Paul—and others—could defect using a familiar political play.
They have options.
Professors and students—many of whom emphatically disagree with Charles Murray—are concerned about attacks on his right to speak on their campus.
A new executive order issued on Monday tightens the scope of the controversial policy, excluding those who already hold valid visas.
Madison Square Garden went partly silent Sunday night, and not because the Knicks are terrible.
The Supreme Court has sent the transgender student’s case back to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals following a new federal guidance letter on schools and bathrooms.
The far-right politician is hoping to ride the populist momentum in the Dutch elections.