The success of anti-abortion activists in enacting ‘trigger laws’ means the impact of a Supreme Court decision would instantly be felt.
Author: Susan Page, USA TODAY
‘Family, family, family:’ Valerie Biden Owens defends brother ‘Joey’ and nephew Hunter
Does Joe Biden’s son Hunter bear some responsibility for the controversies around him? “No,” Valerie Biden Owens said. “Hunter walked through hell.”
Americans saw 2021 as ‘chaos’ and a ‘train wreck’ but are hopeful about 2022: USA TODAY/Suffolk poll
Nearly everyone is glad 2021 is over, according to a USA TODAY/Suffolk University poll. “Awful” and “chaos” were among the words used to describe it.
Calls to ‘defund the police’ clash with reality for many Americans, city polls show
Despite calls for police reform, residents in Louisville and Oklahoma City worry more about rising crime than police misconduct.
Red alert: Crushing defeat in Virginia could signal more bad news for Democrats ahead
Glenn Youngkin, the surprise victor over Terry McAuliffe, walked a Trump-not-Trump tightrope that other GOP candidates are likely to copy next year.
Goodbye, Afghanistan: From George W. Bush to Joe Biden, no celebration as America’s longest war ends
Twenty years after U.S. bombers arrived, the last U.S. cargo plane departs a war that has left its mark, and its sorrow, on four presidents.
For President Biden, the worst-case scenario takes hold in Afghanistan with terror attack
Now there are more questions than answers about why the administration failed to foresee or effectively plan for the catastrophe that is unfolding.
President Biden’s biggest defeat: Afghanistan war ends amid chaos and broken promises
Instead of savoring credit for ending America’s longest war, Biden faces withering criticism for the inept U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Alexander Vindman, the White House staffer who sparked Trump’s 1st impeachment, tells his story
When Alexander Vindman was preparing to testify at the first impeachment hearing, he faced intense pushback from a Trump supporter: his father.
What Elise Stefanik’s rise says about the new GOP: Trump rules. Ideology? Fugetaboutit.
Losing presidential candidates typically fade away. Not Trump, the force behind Cheney’s fall and Stefanik’s rise, launching a new face of the GOP.