At least 57 institutions such as HBCUs and places of worship received bomb threats from Jan. 4 to Feb. 16, according to the FBI.
Author: Bart Jansen, USA TODAY
Bankruptcy very rarely erases student loans. Even when it does, the US government has put up a fight
The Biden administration admits bankruptcy laws for student loans are too strict, yet it’s fought borrowers who had their debt forgiven in court.
Alexander Vindman, whose complaint about Ukraine call led to Trump impeachment, sues Trump
Alexander Vindman, a former Army officer who complained about Donald Trump’s Ukraine call, sues the former president over retaliation.
Supreme Court refuses to block House Jan. 6 panel from receiving Trump documents
Trump had sought to block the documents by arguing the records should remain confidential so presidents can receive candid advice from aides.
What documents does Trump not want the Jan. 6 House panel to see? Appointments, call logs and handwritten notes
Trump asserted executive privilege over records detailing whom the president met and called Jan. 6 as a mob attacked the Capitol.
As Trump digs in, majority of Americans say he and his aides should testify about January 6
More than 60% say Trump aides should testify and 55% say Donald Trump should testify to the House committee investigating the January 6 Capitol riot.
Live updates: President Biden heads to Capitol to meet with House Democrats as negotiations continue
Congress is resuming talks Friday on Joe Biden’s $3.5 trillion social welfare program, to reach a goal of a House vote on the infrastructure bill.
Live updates: Congress may take action Thursday to avoid government shutdown
Senate leaders are scrambling to vote Thursday on a government funding extension while a House panel debates an increase in the debt limit.
Live updates: Senate Republicans block funding bill as Congress scrambles to avoid government shutdown
Congress faces a series of high-stakes votes this week on government funding, the debt limit, infrastructure and President Joe Biden’s priorities.
Schumer, McConnell clash over raising debt limit as Democrats put forth plan to fund government, increase borrowing
Democrats plan to combine temporary government funding with an increase in the debt limit, which Republicans say they will oppose.