
The Supreme Court may rule on Donald Trump’s attempt to enforce his executive order to limit birthright citizenship broadly, a move that would affect thousands of babies born each year.
Senate Republicans were trying to reach consensus over Trump’s sprawling tax-cut and spending bill, including proposed healthcare cuts that have worried some of their more populist-minded members.
Politics Reporter David Morgan in Washington, D.C., tells the Reuters World News podcast about some of the hurdles that remain in their way.
Short of commanders, deprived of much of its tunnel network and unsure of support from its ally Iran, Hamas is battling to survive in Gaza in the face of rebellious local clans and relentless Israeli military pressure.
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said he was unaware of any intelligence suggesting Iran had moved any of its highly enriched uranium to shield it from US strikes, amid continuing questions about the state of Iran’s nuclear program.
Investigators have downloaded flight recorder data from an Air India crash this month that killed 260 people, India’s civil aviation ministry said, a long-awaited step towards understanding the world’s worst aviation disaster in a decade.
For Trump, Vladimir Putin is a man looking for an off-ramp to his bloody three-year assault on Ukraine. But according to NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, the Russian leader may be just getting started. Rutte warned Russia could attack an alliance country within three years.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said there would be “legal consequences” for organising or attending a Budapest Pride march in violation of a police ban on the event planned for this weekend.
Countries agreed to increase the U.N. climate body’s budget by 10% for the next two years, a move the body welcomed as a commitment by governments to work together to address on climate change, with China’s contribution rising