Was the Republican nominee just speaking metaphorically? He insists he meant exactly what he said.
She said she’s stepping down as the editor in chief of the eponymous website to focus on a new start-up.
A U.S. District Judge ordered the radio host to reveal sources who incorrectly told him a Saudi man had financed the Boston Marathon bombings.
Ecuador says Swedish prosecutors will interview the WikiLeaks founder at its London embassy—though no date was given.
A Department of Justice report finds widespread constitutional violations, the targeting of African Americans, and a culture of retaliation.
Turkish officials connected him to the failed July 15 coup attempt.
Gerald Cavendish Grosvenor, 64, was a reluctant billionaire who told the BBC his desert-island song would be “Albatross” by Fleetwood Mac.
The Senate voted 59-21 to indict President Dilma Rousseff, paving the way for her trial in the chamber.
The deaths of 11 babies in a blaze at a Baghdad hospital are likely to increase anger about corruption in the country.
For the second week in a row, the Republican nominee has suggested he won’t participate unless the meetings are set up to his liking.
Israel has accused him of helping Hamas. It’s the second time this month Israel has accused someone with an international organization of helping the group.
During a rally in Wilmington, North Carolina, on Tuesday, the Republican nominee made an apparent joke about the assassination of his rival.
The former Illinois governor will remain in prison for his 14-year sentence.
Saudi-led airstrikes killed at least 13 people in the Yemeni capital after UN-sponsored peace talks broke down over the weekend.
A device plucked from 15,000 feet under the sea could help investigators understand why the cargo ship went down last October, killing 33 people.
Irom Chanu Sharmila began her fast in 2000 to end a law that grants India’s military expansive powers, which human-rights groups have criticized as draconian.
It’s a historic appointment for the European country, but she doesn’t want to be known as “the gay minister.”
The child born to a mother infected with the virus died in Harris County, Texas.
Damage to the Syrian city’s infrastructure has put more than two million people at risk of living without proper access to water.