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An image shared by conservative influencers and a US senator purports to show a July 22, 2025 document from Federal Reserve ...
An anonymous group calling itself Project Winchester is vowing to oust Rep. Harriet Hageman for defending a federal lands ...
Weeks after the DOJ demanded Utah hand over its voter databases, Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson’s office refused to provide all of the information it has on voters, instead sharing only public voter ...
Passing the first package of spending clawbacks in July was an excruciating exercise for the Senate. Now some Republicans are ...
Palo Alto teacher Peter Colombo, who is suing the Palo Alto Unified School District for what he claims was its mishandling of ...
BTS is currently in the US working on a new album with skilled producers and composers for an album slated for a 2026 release ...
U.S. lawmakers and grassroots groups have shaped crypto legislation, following Trump’s policy report on oversight, ...
False online rumours spark protests outside Canary Wharf hotel earmarked for migrants - Protesters gathered at the site in London after posts claimed migrants were being moved there from the Bell ...
The EPA greenhouse gas reversal 2025 could end emissions regulations tied to the 2009 Endangerment Finding. Learn how this ...
The problem isn’t just that the Utah senator amplified obvious misinformation. The bigger problem is that Mike Lee keeps amplifying misinformation.
The problem isn’t just that Mike amplified obvious misinformation. The bigger problem is that the Utah Republican keeps amplifying misinformation.
Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) deleted a social media post on Tuesday featuring a fake resignation letter supposedly written and signed by Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.