President Trump held his first meeting with Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany at the White House on Friday. At a subsequent press briefing, he was asked about recent wiretapping claims and made a joke that seemingly referred to reports that the United States had bugged Ms. Merkel's phone during the Obama administration.
At least 49 were killed, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Michigan won a shootout against Oklahoma State in the first game of Day 2. Stay here for live updates, scores and analysis from the tournament.
The intruder may have triggered alarms the that the Secret Service ignored.
The Wolverines won the battle of the tournament’s best offenses. Stay here for live updates, scores and analysis from the first round of the tournament.
States that make it easier to vote have — surprise — more voters. This and other lessons from the 2016 campaign.
A laptop computer containing national security information was stolen from a Secret Service agent's vehicle in New York City on Thursday.
White House aides tried to mend a rupture between the United States and Britain over claims that a British spy agency was used to conduct surveillance on President Trump.
Jurors will see a key piece of video evidence in the upcoming trial of a white ex-South Carolina police officer in the shooting death of a black motorist, despite the defense's request that it be tossed out
Mr. Walcott’s intricately metaphorical poetry captured the physical beauty of the Caribbean, the harsh legacy of colonialism and the complexities of living and writing in two cultural worlds.
Federal attorneys say a judge shouldn't block President Donald Trump's travel ban in the case of a Syrian family trying to relocate to Wisconsin
The White House tried to mend a rupture between the United States and Britain over claims that a British spy agency was used to conduct surveillance on President Trump.
Firefighters have extinguished a massive late-night fire that engulfed an apartment building under construction in North Carolina's capital city
Mr. Osborne will remain in Parliament while leading the widely read London daily, raising questions about how he will balance his various work commitments.
"The policy of strategic patience has ended," the secretary of state said.