News

Following two attacks by a man posing as police in Minnesota, Americans are wondering if they have to open the door to someone saying they're the police.
Our culture too often reduces disagreement to moral absolutes: You’re with me or you’re a villain. We must resist that ...
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he did not plan to call Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, the Democratic vice ...
Both solemnity and concern were shared across the aisle in the Pennsylvania Capitol as lawmakers discussed the dangers of ...
Early Saturday morning, when a man dressed like a police officer knocked at the home of a Minnesota state legislator, marked ...
Millions of people turned out for "No Kings" protests nationwide on Saturday that were largely peaceful though there were ...
experts who track extremist groups are piecing together the political and religious influences they say likely motivated the ...
The violence against our political leaders is a blow to our Minnesota myths. A bit of Minnesota died Saturday. A myth, a ...
Washington’s Speaker of the House and Senate Majority Leader knew Rep. Melissa Hortman, who was killed in a shooting.
When Joni Ernst quipped that “we all are going to die,” she probably wasn’t referring to her reelection prospects.
There were no votes cast or counted on Saturday, but the peaceful protests were a stunning rebuke to Trump and those who enable him. They were pro-democracy demonstrations against a U.S. president who ...
Timothy Kneeland, a professor of history and politics at Nazareth University, attributed the increase in political violence to political polarization.