As fighting continues between Kurdish fighters and ISIS in the Syrian border town of Kobani, Turkish military involvement swings in the balance.
Obama said immigration reform will pass Congress before he leaves office in 2017.
Beijing lashes back at India and the U.S., telling them they should mind their own business on South China Sea disputes.
A new poll of U.S. millennials reveals a number of interesting trends two years before they vote in the 2016 presidential election.
Craig Robinson is the older brother of first lady Michelle Obama.
Obama will also attend a town hall at Cross Campus, a Los Angeles-based startup incubator.
A report has claimed that investigators had more details about the Secret Service prostitute scandal, but did not want them to be revealed.
A Syrian national, who has been on a hunger strike for most of his 12 years at the prison, described the practice as abusive and painful.
The federal deficit peaked at $1.4 trillion in 2009.
"I do feel bad that so many people don't have a sense of humor," said South Dakota state Rep. Betty Olson.
Five airports in the U.S. will begin screening travelers arriving from countries affected by Ebola for signs of infection.
As the controversial oil-sands crude pipeline faces U.S. hurdles, Canada could send the oil east to New Brunswick.
Republicans have seized on Obama's unpopularity while Democrats avoid appearing publicly with the president.
The former president criticized President Barack Obama's handling of ISIS and his Middle East foreign policy in general.
By some estimates, President Barack Obama received thrice as many threats as his predecessors, during his campaign and first year in office.
Timothy Geithner was president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York during the AIG bailout.
Most Americans don't feel the economic recovery, and they've already decided who to blame.
Only 24 percent of Americans are extremely or quite confident with Obama's economic record, down from 33 percent in June 2013.
Former President Bill Clinton asked Democrats to be patient when they cast their ballots in the 2014 midterms.
The government did not identify the prisoners but virtually all of them were believed to have been jailed for ordinary crimes.
The latest figures, released by the Pentagon Monday, estimate the total expenditure since June in Iraq and Syria at over $1 billion.
Airstrikes from the U.S. and allies haven't stopped ISIS in Kobane. What happens now?