Taiwan scrambles jets as China military overshadows US visit
Kanye West will officially be on the ballot in only a handful of sates this November.
Mortgage holders fared better than renters and student loan borrowers in making payments
Olivia Troye claims that Trump said COVID-19 might be "a good thing" if it let him stop shaking hands with his supporters.
TikTok may be getting blocked from major app stores, but will it still work or suddenly disappear if you've already downloaded it?
The government cited national security and data collection concerns in its order; president may make final decision later Friday.
US to ban TikTok downloads, WeChat use from Sunday
Analysis of Christopher Wray's testimony highlights the division and agendas driving major outlets in today’s political climate.
Melania Trump and Kamala Harris sported the same footwear but received different reception, which Amy Kremer, co-founder for Women blamed it to be "media bias."
Trump administration wrote controversial US agency guidelines on testing: report
A sixth-grade online class at a New York intermediate school was five minutes into its first remote orientation when their virtual classroom was hijacked with disturbing materials.
ByteDance said its video-sharing subsidiary TikTok plan to hold an IPO as it struggles to retain control of the latter's U.S. operations.
As deadline looms, scramble on TikTok deal structure
Trump will not attend UN General Assembly in person
Working-class roots, empathy on display as Biden commands town hall
New polls suggest President Trump may have a chance of winning a second term after the November elections.
Access denied: COVID-19 pandemic complicates journalists' work
The show must go on: virus-era Emmys are virtual -- and live
President Donald Trump attacked the Black Lives Matter movement and 1619 Project during a speech at the National Archives on Thursday.
Senate Republicans this week pushed through six Trump judicial nominees amid stalled negotiations on a COVID-19 relief package.
Twitter tightens security for politicians and journalists
Senate Democrats Chuck Schumer of New York and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts introduced a resolution on Thursday calling on the next administration to forgive up to $50,000 in student loans for each borrower nationwide.