The so-dubbed "bathroom bill" has gained national attention, pitting Houston at the center of the latest battle between LGBT and religious liberty advocates.
Conservatives Vow to 'Not Back Down' in Spending Fight
Looking to protest a budget agreement that increases spending by $80 billion over two years, conservatives may be inclined to advance appropriations bills that include controversial riders, such as a provision to defund Planned Parenthood.
In the latest video from PragerU, Fox News host and bestselling author Greg Gutfeld says conservative principles are more common than you think in professions sometimes identified with liberals—music, exercise and cooking.
When Sonam Dorjee was a Buddhist monk at the Debung Monastery in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa, he would not kill an insect.
As the son of one
of America's favorite dads on screen, he watched Michael Landon write, produce,
direct, and star in hundreds of TV episodes.
Charts to Explain the 2016 IRS Tax Brackets and Other Changes
See whether your tax bracket changed.
A Look Inside the Courtroom Where Property Owners Fight the Government to Get Back Their Cash, Homes, and Cars
For citizens whose cash, houses, or motor vehicles are seized by Philadelphia police, the journey to get their property back begins in Courtroom 478.
The attorney
general of New York is investigating one of our largest oil and natural gas
companies because it might disagree with a scientific theory.
Why the Supreme Court's Latest Obamacare Case Is So Important
The Supreme Court announced it will take up seven cases challenging the Obamacare requirement that nonprofit employers offer their employees health care coverage that includes Plan B, ella, and other potentially life-ending drugs and devices, contraception, and sterilization.
Feeling a Part of the Process, Freedom Caucus Eyes 'Gut Check' for Paul Ryan on Spending Bills
Freedom Caucus members will watch closely how Paul Ryan handles an upcoming debate over spending bills to fund the government.
New Emails: Benghazi Cover Story Continues to Unravel
It turns out, three
days after the Benghazi attack, on Sept. 14, 2012, the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli
specifically warned the State Department in an email not to promote the idea
that an anti-Muslim YouTube video was the cause of the attack.
The National Rifle
Association said the measure's passage reflected a uniform sentiment among gun
owners in the United States.
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