In his opening statements, assistant district attorney Matthew Colangelo said the former U.S. president committed a crime ‘to influence the election’
A report by The Hispanic Council shows that 47% of senators and 26% of representatives use it in their digital communications with citizens
When the president flies for political purposes, the campaign is supposed to pay the bill. But during an election year, the line between governing and campaigning can be fuzzy
Recent lawsuits over voter roll maintenance in Michigan and Nevada are part of a larger strategy targeting various aspects of voting and election administration
The Swedish historian, an advocate of classical liberalism, argues that for a certain sector of the right today, defending the beliefs of Thatcher and Reagan is being a ‘cultural Marxist’
The Islamic Republic is closer than ever to possessing atomic weapons, but the regime insists that it does not intend to manufacture them
From Bill Clinton to Joe Biden, American leaders have taken different stances on gun violence in schools
The first week of the criminal trial against the former U.S. president went according to schedule. The two sides will present their opening arguments on Monday
Increasingly distanced from his former boss, Pence urges Europe to trust his country regardless of the November election outcome
President Joe Biden sent a swift endorsement of the Speaker Mike Johnson’s plan and, in a rare moment, Donald Trump, who opposes most overseas aid for Ukraine, has not derailed the speaker’s work
All wars are savage, but civil wars add an extra element of heartbreak, as writer-director Alex Garland conveys in his dystopian flick
Alternates are now being selected for the first criminal case the former president is facing
Robert F. Kennedy’s sister never directly mentioned her brother, but insisted ‘there are only two candidates with any chance of winning the presidency’ this year
Alex Garland has directed an ‘anti-war’ film against polarization: ‘It would be insane to think that two states could not agree even in the face of a fascist president’
The first article charged Mayorkas with ‘willful and systemic refusal to comply’ with immigration law. The second article charged Mayorkas with a ‘breach of trust’ for saying the border was secure
Half of the candidates have been dismissed because they see themselves as incapable of being impartial, while the rest are questioned by prosecutors and defense lawyers
The House narrowly voted in February to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas for his handling of the U.S.-Mexico border
The conservative justices’ skepticism about the application of that law may benefit Donald Trump
The former president is facing a long list of trials, but support for the Republican has barely wavered
A former police office who was charged with obstruction of an official proceeding for his role in the assault on the U.S. Capitol wants the charge to be dropped on the grounds that it does not cover his conduct
Guarded by police officers, small groups of the former president’s supporters and opponents protest on the first day of the Republican’s trial in New York
The trial, which is the first such case against a former U.S. president, begins with the selection of the 12 jurors who will decide the Republican candidate’s legal fate
The unprecedented event will begin on Monday with the selection of the 12-member jury and is set to last between six and eight weeks
Although invitations have not been formally issued, the news organizations said it was not too early for each campaign to say publicly that it will participate in the events
The first criminal trial of a former president — which could be the only one of the four cases against the Republican candidate to be held before the November election — begins Monday in New York
After years of fits and starts before an indictment last year, the Republican candidate is set to stand trial Monday in New York on state charges related to the very sex scandal that he and his aides strove to hide
A survey conducted by the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance shows that, in 11 of 19 countries analyzed, less than half of voters think that the last elections were free and fair