Trump, Hamas and LIVE
Digest more
Lawmakers on both sides braced for a longer shutdown as the Senate prepares for another vote Tuesday to reopen the government.
Reform UK has blasted Sir Keir Starmer after it emerged he plans to blame Nigel Farage and Brexit for tax hikes in Labour's upcoming Budget. The Prime Minister and Chancellor Rachel Reeves are expected to link a drop in Britain's productivity to the EU exit.
On Thursday, US authorities targeted the Hyundai-LG construction site in Georgia, arresting about 475 people including South Korean workers. Officials called it the largest single-site raid under President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown. Footage showed detainees in handcuffs and chains being loaded onto buses.
Mediaite on MSN
‘You Are The Biggest Nothing in the World’: Martin Sheen Tears Into Trump at Live MSNBC Event
Hollywood star Martin Sheen tore into President Donald Trump during a live MSNBC event on Monday, calling the president "the biggest nothing in the world." The post ‘You Are The Biggest Nothing in the World’: Martin Sheen Tears Into Trump at Live MSNBC Event first appeared on Mediaite.
The Louisiana Secretary of State's office updates election results every 90 seconds as results are counted. You can find those vote totals here for statewide and legislative races, as well as local races by parish. This includes New Orleans, Lafayette, Baton Rouge and Shreveport metro areas.
NEW ORLEANS — Voters will headed to the polls on Saturday, Oct. 11 for the 2025 municipal elections. Key races on the ballot include mayor, sheriff, several city council seats, coroner, parish assessor, and clerks for both the civil and criminal district courts.
Welcome to our live coverage of US politics, which is grim today after yet another example of horrific political violence.
Religion focuses on the unknown and the unseen. While religion has been a tremendous force for good, it has also poisoned politics and given rise to extremists who target “the other.” I remember first hearing John Lennon’s song “Imagine” in college — envisioning “no heaven,
A viewer complained a contributor inaccurately stated 10 million working-age British people were on out-of-work benefits. The ECU assessed whether the programme had had met the BBC’s editorial standards in relation to accuracy.