The Lancaster County Board of Elections on Monday said 17% of 2,500 voter registration applications flagged as potentially fraudulent were, in fact, forged. The elections board verified a majority of ...
President Joe Biden, immigration, COVID-19 and ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick. All four topics were crucial to the story of the American Catholic Church a year ago, and with a trove of new developments, were mainstays once again in 2021.
Former U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid died Tuesday at the age of 82, making him the latest of several established political figures to pass away this year.
Governor-elect Glenn Youngkin is preparing to officially take office next month in Virginia. Meanwhile, the buzz following his election continues about the implications for Democrats ahead of the 2022 midterms.
Here are five notable decisions from the United States Supreme Court in 2021 that have to do with the First Amendment, especially the issue of religious liberty. They include questions over foster care and a student seeking damages for being punished for preaching on campus.
Madison Cawthorn, a Republican congressman from North Carolina, announced Wednesday that he and his wife of eight months have mutually decided to get a divorce.
Partially paralyzed Republican Congressman Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina, who attended a Christian college for one semester before dropping out, urged conservative youth on Tuesday to drop out of college if they aren’t studying medicine, law or engineering because higher education is “a scam.”
Sen. John Thune (R-SD), the Senate minority whip and second-highest-ranking Republican in the chamber, is reportedly considering his retirement at the end of his term in 2023.
A Senate committee has removed some of the controversial language in the Build Back Better bill that would restrict funding and aid for faith-based childcare and pre-k programs unless they adhered to federal anti-discrimination law.