Jeff Sessions claims that Hillary Clinton’s policy would allow up to 620,000 refugees into the U.S.
The loss of the last remaining “AAA” rating represents a fresh blow to Britain’s economic standing after the referendum, with sterling tanking to a 31-year low against the dollar.
With President Barack Obama and Prime Minister David Cameron both set to leave office, the trans-Atlantic relationship could be in flux.
Despite claims to the contrary, there weren’t a huge number of people frantically searching for information on the EU post-Brexit.
The British vote to leave the EU last week dealt a shock to global markets. Here are five stocks to watch.
The U.K. faces a complex set of negotiations to clarify its future relationship with the EU, and it’s starting with some serious handicaps.
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said the EU must now focus “a bit more on social issues and a bit less on bureaucratic ones.”
John Oliver was not happy with the results of the June 23 Brexit referendum.
After the biggest daily fall in the pound in modern history Friday, both U.S. banks were forced to slash their forecasts for the rest of 2016.
Both crude benchmarks closed down around 5 percent Friday amid plunging global financial markets as Britons voted to leave the European Union.
A report to be launched later this week will detail China’s human rights record, which experts say has been deteriorating since President Xi Jinping came to power in 2013.
Last week’s historic referendum, where the British public voted to leave the EU, has kicked off a flurry of diplomatic activity in Europe, even as the economic fallout continues.
The shock result of the U.K.’s EU referendum has erased more than $2 trillion in paper wealth.
The British pound fell anew in early Asian trading on Monday, with investors still at a loss as to what happens next now that the country has voted to leave the EU.
U.S. stock index futures eased slightly in early trading on Sunday after Britain’s vote to leave the European Union sparked a sharp sell-off in global markets on Friday
Acting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s center-right party again emerged with the single biggest bloc of seats but fell short of a majority, leaving the eurozone's fourth-largest economy at risk of another lengthy political stalemate.
Brexit campaigner Boris Johnson, favored to become the next prime minister, said Britain could forge a relationship with the EU based on free trade and partnership rather than a federal system.
Preliminary general election results showed voters opted for the status quo just days after Britons’ shock decision to leave the European Union.
Britain’s Brexit vote has emboldened anti-EU parties across the continent, including the Freedom Party and its presidential candidate, Norbert Hofer.
Hedge funds that bet on or against European stocks were hit hardest Friday, with most losing between 2 and 4 percent, two investors said.
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said on Sunday that Scotland will do whatever it takes to remain in the EU.
Peter Altmaier says Britain always could reapply to the EU later if consequences prove too costly.