Bush is connecting with potential kingmakers, and if the other candidates are in it to win, they will have to catch up.
Sprint Corp. is the first U.S carrier to announce it will sit out of the 2016 airwaves auction.
A petition on a satirical news site garnered more than enough votes to trigger a referendum on the pact.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said earlier on Sunday it was vital to coordinate all efforts against the Islamic State but this was not yet happening.
A report predicts the three Republican hopefuls will quit the race
Separatist majority set for a collision course with Spain's central government.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has made building the country's defense capabilities a top priority.
Ben Carson is almost matched with Donald Trump, taking 20 percent of GOP primary voters' support, compared with Trump's 21 percent.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Barack Obama are scheduled to talk after the former speaks at a United Nations meeting in New York Monday.
It will be the second meeting between the two leaders since they announced a detente after more than half a century of animosity between the former Cold War foes.
"It is like a drip, drip, drip. That's why I said there is only so much I can control," Hillary Clinton told NBC's "Meet the Press."
Speaker of the House John Boehner said the House this week would pass a government funding bill now moving through the Senate, which does not meet conservatives' demands to cut off money for Planned Parenthood.
“As countries that are as vast as continents, we have this very important greenhouse gas emissions target," President Dilma Rousseff says.
Iraq has agreed to begin sharing "security and intelligence" information about the Islamic State group with Iran, Russia and Syria.
Earlier this month, Berlusconi became the most prominent Western politician to visit the Black Sea peninsula, which was annexed by Russia last year.
"God weeps for the sexual abuse of children," Pope Francis reportedly says in Philadelphia Sunday.
On the final leg of his U.S. trip, Pope Francis went to Philadelphia, where he visited a prison and toured the famed birthplace of America, Independence Hall.
Historically, U.S. presidential candidates have used their last names and titles on the campaign trail. This year? Not so much.
Vladimir Putin's government is reportedly stepping up its support for Syria's regime to forestall its demise, a senior European Union official says.
The European Union's dream of building "a ring of friends" from the Caucasus to the Sahara has turned into a nightmare as conflicts beyond its borders send refugees teeming into Europe.
No injuries or arrests were initially reported, after Palestinian youths, chanting "God is great", threw rocks at police in riot gear, who responded with what a spokeswoman described as "appropriate riot dispersal means".
French President Francois Hollande's office says the airstrikes came on the heels of intelligence reports that terrorist attacks on France were being planned in Syria.
Somali lawmakers last month filed the motion against President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, accusing him of abuse of office and "betraying the country".
American and British leaders at the U.N. in New York this week are pushing countries such as Iran and Russia to get involved in an effort to conclude the conflict.
Xi's U.S. trip has - at least in terms of U.S. media coverage - been firmly overshadowed by the wildly popular pontiff, raising questions over its timing and contrasting sharply with the wall-to-wall coverage of Xi by Chinese media.
The police officer charged with manslaughter over the death of Freddie Gray told another officer the man in their custody appeared to need medical assistance, but none was provided at the time, the Baltimore Sun reported.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani used a major United Nations speech on Saturday to demand an investigation into a crush that killed more than 700 people at the annual hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia.
In spite of efforts to stop foreign nationals from joining ISIS, people are still joining the terrorist militia.
While another shutdown like the one in 2013 is unlikely, the government is not taking any chances.
The ruling Communist Party's anti-graft watchdog accused Zhou Benshun in July of "serious breaches of discipline and the law," a euphemism for corruption.