
Kennedy’s Next Target: the Federal Vaccine Court
The system for compensating people injured by vaccines needs significant reform. But the health secretary could alter it in ways that ultimately reduce vaccine access for everyone.
The system for compensating people injured by vaccines needs significant reform. But the health secretary could alter it in ways that ultimately reduce vaccine access for everyone.
The de minimis policy let China benefit at our expense.
Artificial intelligence apps generating fake nudes, amid other privacy concerns, make “sharenting” far riskier than it was just a few years ago.
In a neighborhood that appeals to people from both the right and the left, residents strive for a finely tuned state of political harmony.
Trump may be able to escape the consequences of his actions; the rest of us cannot.
For Quebec City’s tiny English-speaking community, a former jail turned library serves as an essential sanctuary in a metropolis where the domination of French is enshrined in law.
Many in the capital worry that the secular freedoms they enjoyed under the Assad regime are under threat from the new Islamist government.
After similar announcements by France, Britain and Canada, Australia said it would act at the United Nations General Assembly session next month.
Jay Clayton, the interim U.S. attorney for the Southern District, was named on an interim basis after Senator Chuck Schumer blocked his nomination.
The government’s humane and pragmatic approach to immigration is an example for others to emulate.
The company said the service, synonymous with the early days of the internet, will be discontinued on Sept. 30.
Ships carrying Chinese cars are using the Red Sea and Suez Canal even as other vessels still sail around Africa in fear of attacks by the Houthi militia.
The vice president said the White House was trying to determine “when these three leaders could sit down and discuss an end to this conflict.”
Julian Fellowes and Donald Trump both have frothy visions of the Gilded Age. But why would we go back to it in real life?
In a highly unusual arrangement with President Trump, the companies are expected to kick 15 percent of what they make in China to the U.S. government.
The move is part of President Trump’s pledge to crack down on street crime in the nation’s capital.
Anas al-Sharif, a well-known correspondent for the network, was among those killed. Israel said it had conducted a strike targeting Mr. al-Sharif, claiming he worked for Hamas.
A Republican proposal to add five Republican congressional seats in Texas imperils Democrats’ midterm prospects.
On Instagram, the artist Joseph Awuah-Darko asked the world to invite him to dinner before he ended his life. More than 150 meals later, he is still going.
Warm relations between Alaskans and Russians began to shift with the rise of Vladimir Putin and the invasion of Ukraine. In Alaska, feelings on the two leaders’ meeting seemed mixed.
Rescue efforts were continuing as officials tried to assess damage in a region prone to disaster.
Senator Ruben Gallego of Arizona won his seat last year by outperforming national Democrats among Hispanic voters and men. He wants the party to listen to listen to his message as it regroups.
The independent body that redraws the state’s political maps isn’t perfect, many Republicans say. But they prefer that to the gerrymander that Gov. Gavin Newsom seeks to offset one proposed in Texas.
Dmitri N. Kozak, who has said privately that the invasion was a mistake, has lost power to another senior Putin ally, Sergei V. Kiriyenko, who has embraced the military action.
Record-setting rainfall caused intense flooding in and around the Milwaukee area starting on Saturday night.
Alyson Stoner has much to say about their years acting for Disney and Nickelodeon. They’re careful how they say it.
The justices, having effectively blessed partisan gerrymandering, may be poised to eliminate the remaining pillar of the Voting Rights Act.
He missed his chance to be Led Zeppelin’s lead vocalist, but his solo work — and his otherworldly voice — drew raves from Aretha Franklin and others.
The decision triggers fears that the U.S. might return to a pattern of military interference in the region that dates to the Monroe Doctrine.
Some jurors experience mental health effects years after a trial ends.