European Allies Signal Trump On Iranian Nuclear Deal: We Don’t Support You
America’s closest allies sent a strong signal that they do not agree with President Trump on the nuclear deal with Iran.
America’s closest allies sent a strong signal that they do not agree with President Trump on the nuclear deal with Iran.
The numbers aren’t looking good for Republican prospects in this year’s midterm elections.
The Supreme Court heard argument yesterday in an important case dealing with the circumstances under which voters can be purged from the voting rolls.
A Federal Court in North Carolina has issued a stinging ruling against the partisan gerrymandering undertaken by the Republican legislature in that state.
A Federal Judge has put a hold on the impending end of the DACA program.
Steve Bannon loses his position at Breitbart after his blistering comments about the President and others in the Administration became public.
Controversial former Sheriff Joe Arpaio is running for Senate in Arizona.
Some progress on easing tensions between North and South Korea.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg is making it clear she has no intention of leaving office before the 2020 election.
New reports indicate that the President is spending more and more time watching television and tweeting. That’s not what he was elected to do.
Donald Trump’s latest Twitter rant is one of his most bizarre.
Republican David Yancy was declared the winner of a disputed election, giving the GOP a slim one-seat majority in the state’s House of Delegates.
Contrary to expectations, jobs growth in December was relatively modest.
The Trump Administration is reversing policy on an Obama Era policy that allowed states to choose their own course on marijuana laws.
Who needs a First Amendment when you have lawyers willing to write threatening letters?
President Trump has shut down the commission he established to investigate unsupported claims of “voter fraud” in the 2016 election.
Whatever goodwill may have existed between the Trump Administration and Steve Bannon appears to have evaporated.
Donald Trump’s irrational tweets are once again focused on the leader of North Korea.
After forty years in the Senate, Orrin Hatch announced that he will not seek re-election this year, thus opening the door for Mitt Romney to succeed him.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un is extending an olive branch of sorts to South Korea while simultaneously claiming success in achieving a nuclear deterrent.
2017 was quite a year. 2018 promises to be just as interesting.
Roy Moore isn’t giving up, but he can’t stop the inevitable.
Three U.S. cities are suing the Federal Government over the failure to properly report military convictions to the national gun background check database.
The battle for control of the Virginia House of Delegates remains up in the air as both sides continue to dispute the outcome in one district.
An increasing number of businesses are refusing to accept cash as payment, that raises some interesting social and legal issues.
Late yesterday, a panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued a ruling striking down the latest version of Trump’s Muslim Travel Ban.
A Judge in New York has dismissed a lawsuit against the President based on two provisions of the Constitution that had never been ruled on before.
New York Knicks Center Enes Katner is at the center of an international legal dispute for speaking out against the President of Turkey.
A new poll shows President Trump losing to a “Generic Democrat.” This poll means nothing.
After nearly twenty years, the Republican domination of the Virginia House of Delegates came to an end thanks to a single vote.
Republicans passed their tax bill yesterday. What that means for the economy and the 2018 midterms is another question.
As we near the end of the year, the President’s job approval numbers remain at historically low levels, and there’s no sign that they’ll improve in 2018.
Report that President Trump considered withdrawing the Gorsuch nomination are another sign of his unhealthy obsession with pledges of loyalty from people who have no business giving it to him.
Two months after a referendum that supported independence from Spain, Catalan voters head to the polls for a new round of parliamentary elections that remain up in the air.
A Trump judicial nominee who could not answer basic legal questions in a hearing last week has withdrawn his nomination, but this is likely to happen again unless the Administration fixes some obvious flaws in its selection process.
Federal Appeals Court Judge Alex Kozinski is resigning immediately after a barrage of sexual harassment allegations.
Some Democratic Senators are suggesting that Al Franken should reconsider his decision to resign from the Senate.
Once again, tax “reform” won’t make it easier to prepare or file tax returns.
Meet Matthew Peterson, a nominee for the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia who apparently doesn’t know much about trials.
The final version of the tax bill appears to be on track for passage, but the devil is in the details.
With the results from Alabama. the GOP faces a hard road ahead defending its majority in the Senate.
As he nears the one-year anniversary of his Inauguration, President Trump is getting increasingly bad reviews from the public.
Roy Moore’s loss in Alabama is bringing out into the open a civil war that has been going on for seven years now.