Brazil’s House and Senate elected new leaders on Saturday who promised independence from the administration of President Luiz ...
Brazil President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is already staring down rising food prices, deepening investor skepticism and ...
Since the groundbreaking decision to allow student-athletes to profit from their NIL, college sports have entered a new era – ...
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is bracing for another two years of struggle with the nation’s Congress, as ...
Utah Senate President Stuart Adams said on Tuesday that the Trump administration’s pause on federal assistance came as a ...
Former state Senate Republican leader Dan McConchie is resigning his north suburban seat to start a nonprofit organization ...
Secret meeting' issue snowballing into major crisis with open dissent by MLAs against Ministers; TPCC calls in senior leaders ...
The Democrats are angry. Well, at least some of them. For months, party activists have felt bitter about Kamala Harris’s ...
After President Trump imposed new tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China, Maine congressional leaders released statements on the ...
The framers of the Constitution imagined Congress as the preeminent branch of government. But many Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill seem content to play second fiddle.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) also downplayed the freeze as a “preliminary step,” describing it as “a normal practice at the beginning of the administration until they have an ...