The Federal Reserve is expected to deliver two quarter-point cuts to interest rates this year, with the first coming at its next meeting at the end of this month.
Pennsylvania has been without a state budget for over 100 days, and House Democrats and Senate Republicans are $3 billion apart on how much should be spent.
I just spent the last hour feeding a black hole instead of doing what I was supposed to be doing, work. And, no, that's not code for anything. I was literally feeding a black hole in the Steam Next Fest demo for a game called A Game About…
Each year, 5,000 to 6,000 Americans renounce U.S. citizenship mostly for tax-related and logistical reasons but politics is now playing a more central role, lawyers say.
Stablecoins are surging into the financial spotlight as regulators push forward with frameworks that could unlock their full potential to revolutionize cross-border payments and reshape global finance—if executed with precision and…
A Virginia NICU nurse’s innovative approach to infant feeding has earned national recognition with the prestigious Magnet Nurse of the Year Award for leading a culture shift in neonatal care.
New York City Public Schools has filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Education for stopping $47 million in federal grants after the district refused to change its transgender policies.
After last week’s rout, investors relied on calming talk by Federal Reserve officials and easing trade tensions with China to nearly get back to square one.
The Federal Circuit on Friday wouldn't revive an Ohio-based outdoor product company's lawsuit accusing a Texas rival of infringing various fencing patents, finding nothing was wrong with the way the lower court interpreted key terminology…
Federal agents arrested more than 1,400 illegal aliens during a weeks-long immigration enforcement operation across Massachusetts targeting transnational organized crime, violent offenders, and gang members, U.S. Immigration and Customs…
The interim head of the Chicago U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Field Office, who was called to answer questions Monday about federal agents' use of force, is heading back to Washington, effective Friday.