
42 million people could lose SNAP benefits if the government shutdown continues
The program costs approximately $8 billion per month to operate nationwide, and has never missed a monthly payment due to a closure

The program costs approximately $8 billion per month to operate nationwide, and has never missed a monthly payment due to a closure

Kast and Kaiser, the two extremist candidates, are collectively polling at 35.21%, while the mainstream conservative Matthei is at 15.9%. The leftist government privately harbors little hope of winning

The agency’s covert operations, which Trump confirmed last week, hark back to the coups, assassination attempts and insurgencies supported or carried out by Washington in the region during the 20th century

The attorney fears the political use of justice and the erosion of rights in the country, while personally facing a motion that could affect his career

Half of the country’s electricity is generated with imported gas. For experts, this reality must be diversified, so that the country can achieve a sustainable framework

The Mexican singer has just finished a 39-concert international tour, during which she confirmed her pregnancy. She spoke with EL PAÍS before stepping back from the stage for just a few months

The project aims to rescue and care for these felines and return them to the wild, as well as to study their lineage and safeguard their DNA material

Pulitzer Prize-winner for theater makes her debut as a novelist with ‘The White Hot’

The Venezuelan opposition leader reflects in an interview with EL PAÍS on the implications of winning the Nobel Peace Prize, just hours after being awarded

The WIC will run out of funds in a week or two if the administration’s budget is not approved

The president has unsuccessfully tried to quell the social protests with heavy military deployments and economic announcements

The 1807 legislation allows the US president to deploy the Armed Forces on national territory in times of insurrection, rebellion, or widespread civil unrest

The former Greek finance minister warns of the dangers of what he calls cloud capital, the driving force behind technofeudalism

More than 500 local facilities across the country are cooperating with the government’s agenda, despite not being officially recognized to hold migrants

The creator of the application, used to report sightings of immigration agents, says he will fight against its removal

This Wednesday, the government is due to set the maximum refugee quota for the next fiscal year, but the current freeze in the system suggests that those with pending cases will have to keep waiting

The state has passed legislation related to mental health in prisons, AI-generated pornography, and privacy

A previously unknown report alleges that the president of El Salvador cultivated a close relationship with the former US ambassador to the country and current representative in Mexico, Ronald D. Johnson, and asked him to fire a contractor who was helping to investigate senior Salvadoran officials

Shutdowns force many government offices to close their doors, lay off workers, and suspend programs until funding is restored

The wife of the slain Trump activist has emerged as a rising public figure at the crossroads of politics and religion in US conservatism

The DHS says it has received more than 150,000 applications to join the immigration agency, but there are growing concerns about staffing shortages in other forces

Complaints about poor conditions at the new detention center indicate that detainees lack adequate medical care, food, and water

Traditional journalists complain that he is an advocate — the same criticism Woodward and Bernstein faced during Watergate

The suspect, who represented himself, faces life in prison. After learning the verdict, he tried to stab himself in the neck with a pen

This year’s summit in Belém will not only test the durability of the Paris Agreement, now a decade old—it will test whether the world can still come together to confront global threats at a time of fracture and distrust

Poor sanitation, overcrowding, mistreatment, and lack of medical services are taking a toll on the migrants in custody

The agency maintains that it does not use this method in its detention centers, but it does hold people in ‘administrative segregation,’ a euphemism for solitary confinement