Ten days ahead of his presidential inauguration, Donald Trump is scheduled to be sentenced Friday morning in New York for committing what the judge in his case characterized as a "premeditated and continuous deception" to illegally influence the 2016 presidential election.
Mette Frederiksen stresses that America doesn’t call the shots on the strategically important Arctic island’s future.
CNN legal analyst Elie Honig said Thursday that President-elect Donald Trump “actually gets a benefit” when New York Judge Juan Merchan sentences him today. The Supreme Court declined to halt Trump’s sentencing by a 5-4 ruling in which Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the court’s three liberals in rejecting
President-elect Donald Trump will be sentenced today in the New York hush money case. Follow Newsweek's live blog.
President-elect Trump made provocative statements about Greenland, Panama Canal and Canada. Don't get distracted by his bravado. Focus on his actions.
This’ll be among the least suspenseful of all sentencings. Judge Juan Merchan has announced in advance — quite pragmatically, actually — that he intends to sentence Trump to an unconditional discharge. To translate that bit of legal jargon: nothing.
GOP leaders flock to meet with Trump  President-elect to be sentenced today At least 10 dead in Los Angeles fires  Biden sends $500 million to Ukraine This weekend,
The president-elect promises to rule with robber baron tactics and imperial belligerence—just like his role model, William McKinley.
Senate Republicans fear that President-elect Trump’s tax agenda could be derailed in the House by several potential landmines, including calls by some GOP lawmakers to raise corporate taxes and to
Though the president-elect is expected to avoid jail time, his sentencing on 34 counts will formalize his status as a felon and make him the first to carry that distinction into the White House.
Not for the two millennia since — actually, longer. Plato, four centuries before the Crucifixion, spent much time arguing what we know and how we know it. So as the United States of America prepares to inaugurate,