MONTCLAIR, NJ – Questions continue to surround Rep. Mikie Sherrill’s time at the U.S. Naval Academy, where she graduated in 1994 amid a major cheating scandal, but where definitive evidence of her…
By Krystal Hu and Dawn Chmielewski (Reuters) – OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman has hosted hundreds of Fortune 500 company executives in San Francisco, New York and London this month where he…
(Reuters) – A solid majority of U.S. teachers go to work each day anxious that a shooting will unfold at their school, a trend that has paralleled the rising number of such…
(Reuters) – U.S. Steel shareholders voted in favor of the proposed $14.9 billion acquisition by Japan’s Nippon Steel, moving the merger closer to completion while the deal faces regulatory scrutiny and political…
By Tom Balmforth KHARKIV, Ukraine (Reuters) -Kateryna Velnychuk was having an afternoon nap when an explosion shattered the windows of her ground-floor flat, spraying shrapnel that tore holes through her walls and…
By Lucila Sigal and Lucinda Elliott BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -A new ruling by Argentina’s highest criminal court has blamed Iran for a fatal 1994 attack against the AMIA Jewish community center in…
By Padraic Halpin DUBLIN (Reuters) – Ireland is close to formally recognising a Palestinian state and would like to do so in concert with Spain and other like-minded countries, new prime minister…
By Lawrence Delevingne and Douglas Gillison WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A second Trump White House would seek to sharply reduce the power of U.S. financial regulators, according to a review of public documents…
By Daniel Wiessner (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday paved the way for more truck drivers and other transportation workers to file employment-related lawsuits in court rather than private arbitration, ruling…
By Mike Scarcella (Reuters) -“Fortnite” video game maker Epic Games has urged a federal judge in California to force Google to open up its Play Store to greater competition after a jury…
WARSAW (Reuters) – Poland’s parliament sent four bills on liberalising abortion laws to a special bipartisan committee for consideration, voting results showed, a sign of cooperation between ruling coalition parties despite deep…
MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russell Bentley, an American who fought against Ukrainian forces, is missing in the Russian-controlled Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine, police there said on Friday, adding that a search was…
By Nidal al-Mughrabi GAZA (Reuters) – Israeli forces fought Palestinian militants in the north and centre of the Gaza Strip on Friday as Khaled Meshaal, a senior official in Gaza’s ruling Hamas…
By Panu Wongcha-um MAE SOT, Thailand (Reuters) -Hundreds of refugees crossed over the river frontier between Myanmar and Thailand on Friday following the fall of a strategic border town to rebels fighting…
(Reuters) – Ride-hailing companies Lyft and Uber will extend their services in Minneapolis till July 1, they said on Thursday, after city officials voted a day earlier to push back the start…
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) -The Netherlands will provide Ukraine with an additional 1 billion euros ($1.06 billion) in military support this year, and has earmarked 3 billion euros for 2025, caretaker Dutch Prime Minister…
By Raphael Satter, Christopher Bing WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson has failed three times in the past five months to reauthorize a provision of a key spy power…
By Sam Tobin and Martin Coulter LONDON (Reuters) -Apple’s bid to dismiss a lawsuit valued at nearly $1 billion was rejected on Friday, with a judge ruling it must face allegations it…
By Aidan Lewis (Reuters) -A conflict in Sudan that erupted a year ago has wreaked havoc across swathes of the country, unleashed waves of ethnic violence in Darfur, driven millions into extreme…
By Patricia Zengerle and David Morgan WASHINGTON (Reuters) – An unprecedented series of foreign officials, including from Japan, Britain and Italy, have visited Washington over the past several months and appealed to…
By Paritosh Bansal (Reuters) -Something odd just happened in U.S. short-term funding markets: a benchmark interest rate suddenly fell precipitously on March 19 before bouncing back up the next day. The drop,…
By Krishn Kaushik NEW DELHI (Reuters) -Behind the doors of a small, non-descript office in the heart of New Delhi lies the headquarters of an electoral trust run by just two men…
By Sarah McFarlane, Anousha Sakoui and Ron Bousso (Reuters) -The United Arab Emirates’ state-owned oil company recently considered buying Britain’s BP but the deliberations did not progress beyond preliminary discussions, people familiar…
By Patricia Zengerle and John Geddie WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Ukraine risks collapsing under Russia’s onslaught without U.S. support, a disaster that could embolden China and spark a new crisis in East Asia, Japan’s…
By Jeff Mason, Trevor Hunnicutt and Michael Martina WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Long-simmering tensions between China and its neighbors took center stage on Thursday as leaders of the U.S., Japan and the Philippines met…
By Anthony Deutsch AMSTERDAM (Reuters) -A large global survey issued on Friday showed a surge in despair and disillusionment with established politics, particularly among young American men, the only U.S. population group…