Police are trying to determine whether the suspect in the attack at the Pulse nightclub had radical Islamist leanings.
The presumptive Republican nominee accused the Massachusetts senator of pretending to be Native American “in order to advance her career.”
Demonstrators plan to gather Sunday to voice opposition to a six-month sentence for a college athlete convicted of raping an unconscious woman.
Fewer professors say the high school educational initiative is preparing students for college, education testing company ACT reports.
At a private event in Utah this week, the Hewlett Packard Enterprise executive also reportedly likened Trump to Hitler and Mussolini.
In his weekly address, President Barack Obama called on the Senate to approve a measure that would restructure the territory's debt.
If Hillary Clinton and Elizabeth Warren were on the same ticket, they might face a daunting challenge at the ballot box.
Dancers, music and plenty of flags will fill the streets of Manhattan during the annual Puerto Rican Day Parade Sunday.
State lawmakers may investigate Judge Aaron Persky, whose six-month sentence for a Stanford athlete wasn't his first to draw criticism.
The online Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted Monday-Friday, shows 46 percent of likely voters support Clinton, while 34.8 percent back Trump.
The officer fired “a number of times” near the baggage claim area, where the man was engaged in a dispute with the mother of his children, police said.
The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee has faced tough attacks in the past from the very colleagues now cheering her on.
Ford, Apple and Nabisco are among the companies that have been openly criticized by the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.
Despite their differences, Sen. Elizabeth Warren endorsed Hillary Clinton Thursday and the two met Friday to discuss how to take on Donald Trump.
When the larger chain closed all of its stores for food-safety training on Feb. 8, Moe’s took out a full-page ad saying simply, “We’re Open – Especially on February 8.”
President Obama told “Tonight Show” host Jimmy Fallon that he is “worried” about the Republican Party.
The price of a charity meal with the Oracle of Omaha has risen from $25,000 in 2000 to more than $2 million last year. This year’s auction ends Friday.
Despite plummeting revenue, dwindling public interest and opposition from animal welfare activists, the U.S. remains a top market for the sport.
Grab a free glass from Bojangles or Starbucks Friday.
The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee is at the center of an investigation over how classified information got on her private email server.
In backing Democrat Hillary Clinton for president, the U.S. senator from Massachusetts called the Republican a “loud, nasty, thin-skinned fraud.”
HUD Secretary Julian Castro is one of several oft-cited candidates to be the VP choice of the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.
The U.S. senator from Massachusetts will back Clinton during an interview Thursday night with MSNBC's Rachel Maddow.
The president once painted his former rival as a “corporate lawyer sitting on the board at Walmart” and famously said he found her “likable enough.”
In a video Thursday, the president officially backed Hillary Clinton's White House run, saying: “I don’t think there’s ever been someone so qualified to hold this office.”
An estimated 14,000 people attended Thursday's service in Louisville, Kentucky, where speakers repeatedly called Muhammad Ali “the people’s champion.”
Speaking after a White House meeting with President Obama, Bernie Sanders said he will stay in the presidential race through the last primary next week.
Communicating the risks accurately to a public informed by a fear-mongering media is a challenging and delicate endeavor.
“As everyone knows, there are no high-speed trains manufactured in the United States,” said a U.S. company that was set to partner with China Railway.
Seth Meyers broke down the historical significance of Hillary Clinton’s nomination on “Late Night.”