“Americans don’t trust our public health agencies because of RFK Jr.,” said Shaughnessy Naughton, President of 314 Action. “This poll reinforces that doctors, scientists, and health care professionals continue to hold the highest level of trust, as trust in federal health agencies decline under RFK Jr.’s leadership. From cherry-picking data, to citing fake studies and replacing career scientists with wellness influencers, RFK Jr. has shattered confidence in America’s world-renowned public health organizations. While it will take years to rebuild trust and confidence, the best thing Americans can do right now is elect pro-science candidates who will stand up to Trump and RFK Jr. This is our moment—the midterms are shaping up to be the health care election and 314 Action candidates are uniquely positioned to win.”
The Supreme Court's invalidation of the president's sweeping import levies has blown a bigger hole in federal finances.
Federal judge orders $130 billion refund process for Trump tariffs ruled illegal by Supreme Court, affecting over 1,000 companies who paid duties.
Emmanuel Damas died Monday from an untreated tooth infection, his brother said.
Colin Powell had a “blot.” Marco Rubio is just looking for a promotion.
She probably should have seen Trump’s decision to find a new homeland-security secretary coming.
“Turns out lawlessness is not a winning strategy,” one Democratic senator said. “See you at Nuremberg 2.0.”
New York Times-verified images from a scene in southern Iran are horrific. A severed arm of a child lying in the rubble. Backpacks covered in ashes. The dead in body
US Rep. Zach Nunn postponed a fundraiser with Sec. Hegseth that drew criticism amid the Iran war that has killed at least two Iowan servicemembers.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visited MacDill Air Force base in Tampa on Thursday.
Noem was one of the administration's brightest stars when she stepped into the role, but has faced a mounting backlash in recent months.
The U.S. military has formally designated artificial intelligence firm Anthropic a supply chain risk, sources told CBS News, a sweeping move that could cut it off from military contracts.