With President Barack Obama and Prime Minister David Cameron both set to leave office, the trans-Atlantic relationship could be in flux.
In the wake of the Brexit vote, the president urged 1,200 entrepreneurs at Stanford University to embrace a future of interconnectivity.
President Barack Obama’s designation for the Stonewall Inn makes it the first historic site honoring LGBT rights.
A "No Fly, No Buy" measure backed by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, became the latest gun-control effort to fail this week.
A 4-4 Supreme Court tie marked a setback for the president's plan for offering deportation relief to undocumented immigrants.
In a rare moment of cooperation between the Republicans and the Democrats, President Barack Obama is set to sign the first overhaul of toxic chemical rules in 40 years.
Using labels like "radical Islamic terrorism" to refer to threats won't help end the problem, the president said Tuesday.
If Hillary Clinton and Elizabeth Warren were on the same ticket, they might face a daunting challenge at the ballot box.
President Obama told “Tonight Show” host Jimmy Fallon that he is “worried” about the Republican Party.
The president once painted his former rival as a “corporate lawyer sitting on the board at Walmart” and famously said he found her “likable enough.”
In a video Thursday, the president officially backed Hillary Clinton's White House run, saying: “I don’t think there’s ever been someone so qualified to hold this office.”
The White House said the president will send a letter to the Ali family to be read at Friday's service in Louisville, Kentucky.
The address is expected to strike an optimistic tone while also talking with the graduates about security challenges facing the U.S.
Obama becomes the first sitting U.S. president to visit Hiroshima, Japan.
The comments by the Japanese prime minister come ahead of U.S. President Barack Obama’s historic trip to Hiroshima later this week.
President Obama will be the first sitting American leader to visit Hiroshima, but he will not apologize for the decision to drop an atomic bomb.
Considering the celebrity chef’s past criticism of President Barack Obama, Monday night’s dinner conversation was probably a thing to behold.
Barack Obama will become the first sitting U.S. president to tour the site of the world’s first nuclear bombing this Friday.
President Obama aims to boost defense and economic ties with the country's communist rulers while also prodding them on human rights, aides say.
A British exit would rock the EU by ripping away its second-largest economy, one of its top two military powers and its richest financial center.
Pressure has mounted for Obama to use his landmark visit, which begins Monday, to roll back a 32-year-old arms embargo on Hanoi, one of the last vestiges of wartime animosity.
Aides deny the president’s travels to Japan and Vietnam will constitute an apology tour for U.S. actions in World War II and the Vietnam War.