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President Trump’s agenda passed in the Senate. It now goes to the House. Plus, we take a close look at this Supreme Court term.
Mr. Rubin and Mr. Summers, a contributing Opinion writer, were Treasury secretaries in the Clinton administration. Donald ...
I was a journalist living and working in Jerusalem when I got a taste of what the word “intifada,” Arabic for “shaking off,” ...
To determine the best movies of the 21st century, we polled hundreds of celebrities. See how your favorite stars and ...
A Supreme Court decision demonstrates a new degree of imperiousness, seeming to co-sign the Trump administration’s contempt ...
Jerome H. Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve, defended on Tuesday the central bank’s wait-and-see approach to cutting ...
When I was a teenager, a mostly forgotten series of novels taught me U.S. history. How would they read to me now?
A century after the composer’s death, he is ubiquitous on relaxation playlists. Those just scratch the surface of a stranger, ...
Members of the monarchy took part in fewer public engagements in the year leading to March, a sovereign grant report said, ...
Senator Marsha Blackburn said in a statement that she was pulling her support for an amendment to the Senate’s domestic ...
The case involves a challenge to federal limits on how much political parties can spend in coordination with candidates.
The plan to write a policy agenda for the next Democratic president is at the center of a raging debate within the party: whether its biggest problem is its ideas or its difficulty in selling them.