
Speakers highlighted the resilience of the Jewish community in the face of adversity.
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Over 10,000 illegal immigrants, including murderers, kidnappers and sexual predators, have been arrested in Los Angeles since June despite pushback from sanctuary leaders and rioters.

In a Truth Social post President Donald Trump asked when he will be credited for creating "perhaps the Greatest Economy in the History of our Country."

Former British Prime Minister Liz Truss claimed the Bank of England sabotaged her 49-day tenure in 2022, revealing details in an exclusive Fox News Digital interview.

Congress is getting all twisted up over health care policy again, and every time they do so it is generally a polemical skirmish regarding one of two things: A) how to deal with whatever problem the government created in health care; or B) how to dea

HUD launches investigation into DEI housing practices in Boston, Massachusetts, alleging the city's race-based preferences violate federal anti-discrimination laws.

NCTC chief Joe Kent said Operation Allies Welcome created major screening vulnerabilities, with roughly 2,000 Afghan arrivals now under investigation for potential terrorist affiliations.

Colorado officials say the pardon is invalid because Tina Peters was convicted under state law and the president may grant pardons only for federal offenses.

The president urged to increase oversight of the proxy advisor industry to curb what he called 'politically-motivated agendas.'

President Donald Trump signed an executive order Thursday aimed at blocking states from crafting their own regulations for artificial intelligence, saying the burgeoning industry is at risk of being stifled by a patchwork of onerous rules while in a

President Donald Trump on Thursday said he is “pardoning” Tina Peters, though that won’t free the former Colorado elections administrator as she was convicted under state laws of a security breach of her office's voting equipment. Trump's pardon powe

President Donald Trump announced on social media Thursday that he is pardoning convicted former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters. Peters was convicted on Colorado state charges, and under current law, presidential pardons don’t apply to state conviction

President Donald Trump delivers remarks at the Congressional Ball.