TikTok Ban Bill Passed by Congress. What Happens Next.
The future of the short-video platform in the U.S. is now in doubt. What it means for Meta Platforms, Alphabet, and Oracle.
The future of the short-video platform in the U.S. is now in doubt. What it means for Meta Platforms, Alphabet, and Oracle.
Trump may be trying to wriggle his way out of testifying, which he'd previously pledged to do.
KEVIN Bridges had fans in stitches with his take on the chaos caused by Humza Yousaf booting the Greens out of government.
Whether you shop at Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons or any other major supermarket in the UK, customers are being warned grocery bills could increase
A couple of years ago, I noted in passing on Twitter (as it then was) that there was an international border between the UK and Ireland on the island of Ireland. To my surprise, Irish nationalists piled in to deny this objective legal reality. I couldn’t help recalling George Orwell’s comment that, for nationalists, “a known fact may be so unbearable that it is habitually pushed aside … or on the other hand it may enter into every calculation and yet never be admitted as a fact.”
In the context of a sprawling global leviathan that has just posted profits of $7.7bn (£6.1bn) in the last three months alone, Shell’s decision to close a small power generation unit in China amounts to little more than a rounding error on its books.
As nights go, the local elections heralded a great one for Labour. Think after-work drinks, kissing the colleague you’ve flirted with for months and ending up back at theirs. That was Labour in the early hours of Friday morning while the Tories were left looking like the halitosis-ridden bloke who’s worked at the office for years that no one wants to talk to, let alone snog.
Mark Peterson-Pool/Getty ImagesDonald Trump can dish it out, but he has shown, once again, that he simply cannot take it.As proceedings began Thursday morning in the disgraced ex-president’s criminal hush-money trial, defense attorney Todd Blanche complained to New York State Supreme Court Judge Juan Merchan that the gag order put in place to prevent Trump from intimidating witnesses, jurors, and court staff was unfair to his client.“Everybody can say anything they want, except for President Tru
As John Swinney emerges as favourite to succeed Humza Yousaf as leader, Guardian readers share their views
The Conservatives won council by-elections in Hillingdon and Wandsworth, while Labour’s vote share dropped
The Queens-born former president made a notable error while honoring "New York's Bravest."
“I’m tired of calling him names,” said the Hollywood icon, who gave an (almost) curse-word-free interview about the threats posed by a possible second Trump presidency.
The former president made the chilling remark about the 2024 election to a Wisconsin newspaper.
Londoners will now have to wait until Saturday when they are due to find out who their new mayor is
Doug Mills/GettyDonald Trump tried—and failed—to lure the judge overseeing his New York criminal trial into the position of greenlighting his angry screeds to ensure they don’t violate a gag order that seeks to stop him from continuing to intimidate witnesses and jurors.The move came after Trump got slapped with $9,000 in fines and a warning of a potential stay in the slammer on Tuesday, then had to fend off the risk of an additional $4,000 in penalties Thursday morning.After a trial lunch break
The former president's niece described a "split screen" effect that she believes could be damaging to the case against her uncle.
Elite dinner co-hosted by entrepreneur David Sacks at his home in the Hollywood Hills
No love lost between the one-time double act, then.
The former president pronounced the word oddly over and over again as he invited a vegan restaurant owner onstage at a rally.
The Fox News host was unimpressed after Jake Tapper told viewers about the moniker, which entered the court record Thursday.
Labour has suffered a shock defeat in Oldham in a warning sign that the war in Gaza could haunt Sir Keir Starmer at the next general election.