Zelenskyy's Right Hand in a Cell: The Arrest That Shakes Wartime Ukraine
The man who slept metres from Zelenskyy in a wartime bunker now faces 60 days in pre-trial detention on money-laundering charges. The president hasn't said a word.
The man who slept metres from Zelenskyy in a wartime bunker now faces 60 days in pre-trial detention on money-laundering charges. The president hasn't said a word.
Four Republican senators have now broken with their president on Iran. The latest — Lisa Murkowski — is the one her colleagues watch for permission to dissent.
Three Republicans broke ranks in the closest war powers vote yet. The resolution still failed — but with gas at $4.50 a gallon and no end in sight, the cracks in Trump's party are starting to show.
An 18-year-old carried Fahrenheit 451 to Argentina's presidential palace. Organizers say 600,000 more marched behind her. The government called the protest "completely political."
Companies have already received $35.5 billion in tariff refunds. On Tuesday, an appeals court put those tariffs — and potentially that money — back in legal limbo.
A corporate lawyer with no medical degree now heads the FDA. A person-to-person hantavirus has killed three aboard a cruise ship carrying passengers from 23 countries. These two facts are simultaneous.
Four ministers have resigned and 30-year gilt yields have hit 5.81%, the highest since 1998. The bond market is rendering its verdict on British political stability in real time — and it is not flattering.
A year after seizing Britain's last primary steelworks from its Chinese owner during a national security scare, Keir Starmer's government is moving to nationalise it outright. The bill so far: £377m and counting.
The defendant said nothing at his arraignment on four federal charges. The harder question is whether two of the Justice Department's top officials — who were in the ballroom when the shots rang out — can prosecute the man who allegedly tried to kill them.
The vote was 255 to 26. Sara Duterte now faces a Senate trial on charges including misusing ₱612 million in public funds and an alleged assassination plot against the president.
About 2,700 Americans with six-figure child support debts are losing their passports. A far lower threshold could follow, ensnaring thousands more in a policy that treats international travel as contingent on financial compliance.
Keir Starmer won a landslide in 2024. Less than two years later, a backbencher is roughly 10 nominations from triggering a formal leadership contest — and at least 40 of his own MPs want him gone.
Labour lost 1,460 council seats and was pushed to third place in Wales. Now a backbench MP is giving the cabinet until Monday to find a new leader — or she'll trigger a leadership contest herself.
David Farley won more than 40 percent of first preferences in a seat One Nation polled at 6.6 percent a year earlier. The Coalition parties, combined, could not reach 20. Pauline Hanson says she's coming for more.
Péter Magyar walked into Hungary's parliament Saturday with a two-thirds majority and a promise to dismantle the system he once served. He has the votes. The question is whether institutions hollowed out over 16 years can be rebuilt faster than they were dismantled.
ABC has retained a conservative Supreme Court litigator to argue that Trump's FCC is weaponizing broadcast licensing to silence critical coverage. The filing warns of consequences 'for years and potentially decades to come.'
Trump has signed off on firing FDA Commissioner Marty Makary — reportedly over delays approving blueberry vapes. The CDC has no director. There is no surgeon general. The hollowing out continues.
162 declassified files, six US agencies, and zero confirmed extraterrestrials. The real story behind the Pentagon's UFO release is the political machinery that produced it.
In Wigan, a former mining community Labour controlled for over 50 years, the party lost every single council seat overnight. The beneficiary is Nigel Farage's Reform UK, which is turning Brexit-era loyalties into a lasting political realignment.
A federal trade court ruled Trump's 10% global tariffs illegal on Thursday — the administration's second major legal defeat on tariffs this year. Replacement duties under a different statute have been in the works for weeks.