President Trump says he likes Biden's idea to open up federal lands for AI data centers. His White House is looking for ways ...
The U.S. claims the hacking was commissioned by a lobbying firm working on behalf of one of the world's biggest oil companies ...
Evacuation orders were lifted Thursday for tens of thousands as firefighters slowed the spread of a huge wildfire in ...
Warning: The answer to this week's 11th question may cause you to defenestrate your phone in abject disgust for the degraded ...
Dr. Jayne Morgan, a cardiologist and the vice president of medical affairs at Hello Heart, a cardiovascular health tracking ...
Unstable federal funding puts at risk the government statistics used to track the U.S. economy and population, officials and ...
Congress passed a law in 1992 requiring the documents surrounding President Kennedy's assassination to be released by 2017.
The incident only lasted seconds, but it sparked what has become a global debate about how to interpret what Musk did. Then ...
Members of the family who own OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma, and the company itself, agreed to pay up to $7.4 billion in a ...
Tennis star Novak Djokovic was booed by some sections of the crowd after retiring injured from his Australian Open semi-final ...
Donald Trump is back in office and already flexing executive authority in unprecedented ways. NPR hears analysis from Bowdoin University's Andrew Rudalevige, who studies presidential power.
The Minnesota Supreme Court could rule any day in a pair of cases that could uproot the power structure in the state House. Democrats had, until recently, controlled the entire state government.