Hackers breached the computer networks of a southeast Florida health care system in October and may have accessed sensitive personal and financial information on over 1.3 million people, the health care system announced this week.
Omicron might be less dangerous, but it’s twisting the nation in knots
Every American is being drawn into a reckoning over how much risk is acceptable to get the nation back on its feet as the new Omicron variant of Covid-19 rages out of control.
Biden will make ‘brief remarks’ on rapid spread of the Omicron variant
President Joe Biden on Tuesday will make brief remarks addressing the rapid spread of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus in the US and the steps his administration is taking to address it, according to the White House.
Judge blocks Navy vaccine policy for legal challengers citing religious objections
A federal judge in Texas on Monday ruled against the Biden administration’s vaccine requirement for members of the military in a decision that took aim at how the Navy’s policies handled those who sought religious exemptions from receiving the Covid-19…
Analysis: Republicans are in great shape to win the House majority
Republicans are in a very strong position to win back the House in November, according to new ratings released recently by the Cook Political Report, a nonpartisan political handicapping service based in Washington.
Abortion providers go back to Supreme Court in long-shot bid to challenge Texas abortion law
Abortion providers on Monday asked the Supreme Court to require a conservative federal appeals court to return their challenge to Texas’ six-week abortion ban to a district court judge who previously ruled in their favor.
Russian businessman’s Kremlin ties could prove intel ‘gold mine’ for US, former official says
A Russian businessman who appeared in US court Monday on securities fraud charges could be a valuable asset in US efforts to gather more information on Russian interference in the 2016 election as well as other intelligence operations, former US offici…
New polling shows rising acceptance of political violence 1 year after January 6 riot
A year after the January 6 Capitol Hill insurrection, Americans are increasingly likely to say political violence can be justified.
New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Gardner announces retirement after 45 years as the state’s top election official
New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Gardner announced Monday that he will be retiring, ending his 45-year run as the state’s top election official and the most vocal proponent of New Hampshire’s status as the first in the nation primary state.
‘We’re staying open’: Adams bucks teacher’s union request days into new administration
Eric Adams has started his tenure as New York City mayor by rejecting a request from the city’s largest teachers’ union to temporarily move public schools to remote learning, capping off a frenetic first 72 hours of his administration.