Hillary Clinton Regains Double-Digit Lead Over Donald Trump: Reuters/Ipsos Poll
The Democrat's numbers are back up after Republican Donald Trump enjoyed a brief boost in support following the Orlando massacre.
Turkey Detains 28 People Over Alleged Financial Links To Cleric Gulen: Dogan Agency
The detentions stem from allegations of funding the movement of U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, a foe of President Tayyip Erdoğan.
Britain’s EU Commissioner, Finance Chief Hill, Says Resigning
Jonathan Hill, a lobbyist and former Conservative Party leader, follows his ally Prime Minister David Cameron in stepping down after the Brexit vote.
France Says Need Quick Start Of Brexit Talks, No ‘Cat And Mouse Game’
France is pushing for Britain to quickly start the process of its exit from the European Union.
Scotland’s Sturgeon Presses Ahead With Preparations For Independence Vote
The region’s devolved government is preparing to present legislation allowing a second independence referendum, with a view to stay within the EU.
Brexit Talks Must Be Quick, City Of London At Risk Of Losing ‘EU Passport’: ECB’s Villeroy
The comments were made Saturday by European Central Bank Governing Council member Francois Villeroy de Galhau.
France Presses For Quick EU Divorce With Britain, Germany Cautious
France is calling for the process of Britain's leaving the EU to be quick, while Germany is asking for a more cautious approach.
Puerto Rico Governor Suspends Payments On Infrastructure Debt
The U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation aimed at creating a federal oversight board to oversee a restructuring of the island's debt earlier in June.
Arizona Says It Has Run Out Of Drugs For Executions
Drug company Pfizer Inc. said last month it had banned the sale of execution drugs, cutting off the last major U.S. source for drugs in the deadly mixes.
China Says Has Stopped Communication Mechanism With Taiwan
The move by Beijing was reportedly a response to the new government in Taipei refusing to recognize the "one China" principle.
Hawaii Becomes First US State To Place Gun Owners’ Names On FBI Database
The state's governor signed into law a bill to have police enroll people into an FBI criminal monitoring service after they register firearms.
Citigroup Resolves ‘Technical Issue’ That Left Accounts Frozen
The outage, since resolved, affected several U.S. states, including New York, Pennsylvania and California, and had customers railing on social media.
YouTube, Facebook Move Toward Automatic Blocking Of Extremist Videos: Report
The companies are using automated systems to block new postings of material that already appears in a database of banned content.
At Least 20 Dead In Severe Flooding In West Virginia
"The damage is widespread and devastating," Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin said, after heavy rainfall caused rivers and streams to overflow.
US, EU Agree On Changes To Data Transfer Upgrade
The revised Privacy Shield plan, which would succeed the previous Safe Harbor arrangement for trans-Atlantic transactions, will face a vote in July.
Pentagon Expected To Repeal Ban On Transgender People Next Month
The disclosure came as the U.S. Army welcomed its new secretary, Eric Fanning, the first openly gay leader of a U.S. military service branch.
TD Ameritrade, Fidelity Glitches Rile Customers
People took to Twitter with complaints after having trouble accessing their online accounts following the Brexit vote.
Hacking Suspect’s Victims Included Ex-FBI Boss, US Says
A Filipino man allegedly accessed celebrities' accounts, then used data to attempt wire transfers, make purchases or change addresses, authorities say.
Savage Storm Pummels Eastern China, Killing 98
Pictures online showed injured people lying amid destroyed houses, overturned cars and split tree trunks.
Henkel Buys Laundry Care Firm Sun Products In $3.5 Billion Deal
The acquisition will add well-established brands to the German company’s portfolio and make it the No. 2 laundry care maker in North America.
Cigna-Anthem Deal Could Raise Health Costs, Analysis Suggests
If allowed to merge, the combined insurer would serve major companies, which tend to buy employee coverage plans from just one or two providers, an analysis shows.
Yen Rebounds, Pound Slides As Brexit Anxiety Flares Up
"Markets are incredibly nervous now," said Joe Rundle, head of trading at ETX Capital.
Colombia Government, FARC Rebels Sign Ceasefire Pact
The accord, capping three years of peace talks in Cuba, sparked celebrations and tears of joy in Bogota, the Colombian capital.
Volkswagen To Pay Over $10B For US Emissions Scandal: Sources
Nearly 500,000 vehicle owners were affected by the German automaker's efforts to evade U.S. anti-pollution standards.
Gun Control Bid Fizzles In Congress; Sit-In Ends
A "No Fly, No Buy" measure backed by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, became the latest gun-control effort to fail this week.
HP, Apple Others Fighting Risk Of Forced Labor
Meanwhile, companies like Keyence, BOE Technology and Canon scored lowest in trying to clear their supply chains of worker exploitation.
Amazon, Other E-Commerce Sites Spark Bull Market For Warehouses
Traditional retailers might ship a pallet full of merchandise to a store, but online shippers send out individual packages, so they need more space to hold more inventory.
Freddie Gray Case: Baltimore Judge Clears Police Officer Caesar Goodson Of All Charges
The second not-guilty verdict makes it less likely that other officers awaiting trial in the 2015 death of Freddie Gray will be convicted.
US Jobless Claims, Factory Data Point To Firming Economy
Initial claims for state unemployment have now been below 300,000 for 68 straight weeks, the longest such streak since 1973.
Freddie Gray Update: Baltimore Cop Not Guilty Of Most Serious Charge
Ceasar Goodson, 46, was the driver of a police transport van in which Freddie Gray broke his neck in April 2015.