For four years, former vice president Mike Pence sparked disparaging memes for his unblinking loyalty to Donald Trump. Now he is deferential no more.
Author: Susan Page, USA TODAY
Jan. 6 committee zeroes in on central question: Should Trump be held accountable for Capitol attack?
The Jan. 6 committee put a spotlight on a central question: Whether Trump should be held accountable for his role in the Capitol riot. And if so, how?
From the archives | ’24 hours in the ER’ shows challenges of health system
Reporters talked with patients and healthcare personnel about their experiences and their views on changing the system.
The latest unprecedented Trump chapter brings mystery and political thorniness
Neither Democrats nor Republicans are entirely sure what is ahead, because we have never been here before.
Why Nancy Pelosi is visiting Taiwan despite China’s threats and pleas from Biden
Pelosi has a history of standing up to China and also of defying presidents, from George H.W. Bush to Bill Clinton to Donald Trump and now Joe Biden.
This time, it wasn’t what he did. It was what he wouldn’t do as a mob attacked the Capitol
The Jan. 6 hearing had the feel of a pointillist painting, dabs of details that only with a step back form a coherent portrait.
Exclusive: Kissinger sees ‘painful’ need for better leaders. Will they arrive in time?
Henry Kissinger, at 99, finds himself worried about the nation and the world during a time of tumult.
Ketchup on the wall, a scuffle in the limo: A Trump assistant ignites the Jan. 6 inquiry
Cassidy Hutchinson’s testimony Tuesday on the Capitol riot was as shocking as anything Americans have heard in two centuries of presidential scandals.
Biden approval rating at 39% amid economic fears; 47% ‘strongly disapprove’: USA TODAY/Suffolk poll
A new USA TODAY/Suffolk Poll shows the country in a funk, signaling problems for President Biden and Democrats in the November midterm elections.
GOP views on gun laws are shifting. After the Uvalde shooting, could that push Congress to a deal?
More Republicans blame “loose gun laws” for mass shootings, a new polls shows. That could make GOP lawmakers feel more comfortable about compromising.