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Mr. Bolton admitted to mishandling classified information and could face time in prison, in an inquiry that spanned the Trump and Biden administrations.

President Trump’s priorities seem increasingly detached from the concerns of voters and his party.

One nonprofit, Defending Education, initiated nearly a dozen civil rights investigations targeting diversity programs and transgender policies.

Weeks of intense strikes by Ukraine have rattled everyday life in Crimea to an extent unseen since Russia illegally annexed the peninsula in 2014.

Ukrainian officials say their northern neighbor is allowing its radio relay stations to be used to guide Russian attack drones more precisely.

Twin earthquakes have left thousands homeless. Many others who are too afraid to sleep in their homes have taken to the streets.

“This is a victory 10 years in the making,” a White House official said after the Supreme Court ruled that the Trump administration could end deportation protections for some migrants.

The president did not say how or whether he would respond, a day after Iran fired on a container ship that was transiting the Strait of Hormuz, an act Mr. Trump called “foolish.”

Facing an emerging U.S.-Iran deal that leaves them vulnerable, Gulf Arab countries are reshaping their defense strategies, economies and trade routes.

The cost of crude has become a real-time barometer of the Iran war’s toll on the global economy.

Consumer sentiment rose in recent weeks after plummeting early this year as energy costs soared.

The vice president said that the scandal that ended Richard Nixon’s presidency would be “like a 12-hour news story” if it happened today and that the “deep state” had taken down Nixon.

The Telemundo announcer Andrés Cantor must train to deliver his famed scoring celebration for the World Cup, where he could call 20 games in about a month.

Heat-related deaths and disruptions to daily life are forcing politicians to reckon, in different ways, with a rapidly warming planet.
Parts of Spain, France and other countries are seeing slight relief, but the record-breaking heat wave is far from over.

Crowds in the capital’s central business district fled as the crash sent debris falling into the streets below.

Britain may have lost the Revolutionary War, but London still holds the blueprints of the American Revolution. Follow in the founders’ footsteps at these notable places.

The presentation of an original German-language translation in Berlin is an opportunity to consider the shared history of the United States and Germany.

Thousands of men and boys gathered in central Washington for masculinity, Christianity and right-wing politics.

What’s most surprising is that Tesla and SpaceX have entered that elite group. A vast majority of companies weren’t worth owning, a long-running study shows.

Price cuts and low-interest-rate loans are luring buyers, including people offended by the company’s chief executive.

The prime minister’s official residence in Ottawa, in disrepair and vacant for more than a decade, has become the country’s most prominent home renovation project.

After “House of the Dragon,” a starring role in another big franchise, “Supergirl,” gave Milly Alcock pause. It’s “this new gift of learning to accept the fear.”

Milly Alcock is naturally appealing in this derivative, if altogether watchable, superhero movie.

Where is Chief Justice John Roberts? And why isn’t he putting limits on this administration?
Four young Cubans grapple with what it means to stay on an island facing unprecedented migration.

We look at the impact of the Supreme Court’s immigration rulings.

It’s rough out there. We want to hear about it.

Jonathan Rinderknecht was accused of setting a brush fire that later became the deadly Palisades fire. The jury could not reach a verdict on the three arson-related charges.