Tornadoes Reported in Wisconsin and Illinois as Violent Storms Sweep the Midwest
The National Weather Service issued several of its highest-level tornado alerts on Wednesday night.
The National Weather Service issued several of its highest-level tornado alerts on Wednesday night.
The Federal Reserve’s new chairman held a press conference where he bantered with reporters and laid out a vision for change at the central bank.
The horse bolted after the driver stepped out to take a photo of the passengers, the carriage drivers’ union said, and an 18-year-old tourist from India fell from the driverless carriage.
Many see the rivalry between France and Senegal as a result of colonial heritage. But at the same time, European teams are more African than ever.
Heavy rain and flash flooding are expected across the region through Friday.
Also, the U.S. shares details of the preliminary Iran deal. Here’s the latest at the end of Wednesday.
President Trump lashed out at critics who say the agreement achieves less than the one President Barack Obama signed in 2015, and he threatened to bomb Iran again if it violated the deal.
It’s the third such deal the Interior Department has struck to pay firms to abandon plans for offshore turbines, spending roughly $2.5 billion to get companies to abandon their wind projects.
The agreement outlines a $300 billion plan to rebuild Iran, and says sanctions would be lifted in the future.
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Democrats and some Republicans excoriated President Trump’s pick for a top national security job. The president pushed ahead anyway.
The spectacle seemed targeted to the young male voters drifting away from the president. Some were skeptical.
The president upended the majority leader’s plans by yanking his intelligence nominee from a confirmation hearing and insisting on an end to the filibuster.
The State Department is taking over much of the control of global health initiatives, for which critics say the department does not have the expertise.
Thousands of New Yorkers will descend on Lower Manhattan on Thursday morning to celebrate the Knicks. Here’s what you should know if you are one of them.
Traders are waiting for U.S. and Iranian officials to meet in Switzerland on Friday, when they are expected to sign an initial agreement and begin a 60-day cease-fire.
The pastor, Jackson Lahmeyer, dropped out of the race for a House seat in Oklahoma as President Trump backed Mr. Lahmeyer’s Republican rival in a runoff election.
The department announced that it would deploy more than 10,000 of its ranks and put stringent security measures in place for the celebration of the Knicks’ N.B.A. championship on Thursday.
Ms. Collins, a Republican in Maine facing a tough re-election battle, defended her vote to confirm Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh as Democrats look to capitalize on it politically.
The 2024 election showed that the party is simply not large enough to command a majority of the country.
More than 100 days after U.S. airstrikes demolished an elementary school in the southern Iranian city of Minab, the president said the episode was still under investigation.
Interest rates didn’t change, but the language in Fed’s policy statement, which it released alongside its rate decision today, certainly did.
At the Group of 7 gathering in France, President Trump’s oscillations on his Iran deal and Ukraine left European leaders racing to catch up.
The administration argues that FISA Section 702 must be renewed to preserve national security, but the president himself has threatened to veto it.
All eight crew members died when the bomber crashed during a routine test mission at a military base in California on Monday.
The leaders of the Georgia House of Representatives said they would not redraw U.S. House districts held by Black Democrats just hours before a special session was to begin.
A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, disclosed what the official said was the full text of the deal between the two countries.
Cameron Hamilton, who briefly led the agency on an acting basis last year but was fired for contradicting the president, also said he would get money out to states faster.
Bill Pulte, who has shown that he has a keen sense of what the president wants and a desire to please him, is poised to take over the job from Tulsi Gabbard on an acting basis.
Some shareholders might object, but there is little they could do, legal experts say.