The newly open nation is selling more gems than ever, even though the U.S. will not be a customer.
Bringing the NSA leaker back to the U.S. depends on relations with Russia. And those relations are getting worse.
The president is not committed to a separate meeting with Putin, however, and criticized the Kremlin for harboring Snowden.
The power Barack Obama used to help Apple has been used only four other times, thrice by Ronald Reagan.
IBT Media, the publisher of International Business Times, said it will acquire Newsweek from Barry Diller’s IAC.
Only a few years old, the nonprofit 13th Avenue has a plan to send a million Americans to school debt-free.
President Obama criticized Kanye West and Kim Kardashian for their materialism and its impact on youth.
The 40th vote on Obamacare is the last vote before Congress heads out for August recess.
Larry Summers, Janet Yellen or Donald Kohn will be the next Fed chairman.
The U.S. Secretary of State made a pseudo-promise that drone strikes in Pakistan may end "very, very soon."
Obama revealed his game plan to congressional Democrats in a meeting on Wednesday.
The bill allows undergraduates to borrow at 3.86 percent interest this year, based on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note yield on June 1.
Secretary of State John Kerry said the two parties will meet within the next two weeks to start negotiations.
The president plans to push a corporate tax overhaul to break the logjam, but Republicans ask: What about individuals and small businesses?
A joint partnership between the National Association of Manufacturers and union groups support the Keystone project.
The president is meeting with Israeli and Palestinian negotiators in Washington -- the first direct talks between both sides since 2010.
To justify the metadata program, government officials claim that all personal records are "relevant" to a national security investigation.
Fast food workers in seven cities have gone on strike, asking for a raise of $15 an hour and the right to unionize.
The Florida senator wants the president to face an impossible dilemma: keep the government open by defunding his signature reform.
The top U.S. travel association has laid out a case for government travel spending amid a congressional push for more caps.
Serco is a corporation that provides services to everyone from Queen Elizabeth II to the U.S. government.
Members of both parties have united over the NSA's sweeping data program -- but, for some, opposition actually centers on President Barack Obama.