The Take: Why Washington can't stop Trump on Iran | News - Al Jazeera
Trump has launched strikes on Iran while Congress debates war powers.
January 6th, election interference, acts of authoritarianism, voter suppression, and systematic undermining of democratic institutions.
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Trump has launched strikes on Iran while Congress debates war powers.
Permissive and political. Helmer's bill does not ban schools from teaching about Jan. 6. Instead, it requires a specific framing and bars presenting ...
U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Houston, was defeated and four other incumbents — Democrats and Republicans — found themselves in close races or runoffs as votes were still being counted early Wednesday.
Washington, DC, March 3, 2026 — The following is a statement from Vanessa Cárdenas, Executive Director of America’s Voice: While President Trump has unleashed a new war in the Middle East, his existing war against immigrants and American communities continues unchecked and unabated. Americans are struggling to afford rent, groceries and healthcare, yet this administration is […]
Justice Department lawyers are heading to court today to defend President Donald Trump’s attacks on law firms after the administration backtracked on a move to drop out of those fights.
If Pam Bondi truly wants to read my personal statement, she can email me. Until then, Harvard must fight the latest lawsuit: for its students, for itself, and for the country.
Last night, I wrote to you about reporting that the Trump administration would stop defending the clearly illegal executive orders the president issued last March.
Donald Trump’s post on Truth Social about Iran echoed a conspiracy theory that has been circulating online for years.
More than 200 complaints allege military commanders framed US strikes on Iran as part of a biblical prophecy, invoking the Book of Revelation and describing Trump as divinely 'anointed', according to the Military Religious Freedom Foundation.
Critics say administration has overstepped authority in using 1994 law to prosecute protesters and journalists
As a matter of journalistic duty, I forced myself to watch the endless State of the Union reality show.
Virginia lawmakers on Monday passed a proposal that would require schools, if they teach students about the violent attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to relay the facts of what actually happened, without including misinformation that the 2020 presidential election was stolen or that the attack was just a peaceful protest.