Chris Hipkins sworn in as New Zealand Prime Minister
Chris Hipkins was sworn in Wednesday as New Zealand’s 41st Prime Minister, following the unexpected resignation last week of Jacinda Ardern.
Chris Hipkins was sworn in Wednesday as New Zealand’s 41st Prime Minister, following the unexpected resignation last week of Jacinda Ardern.
Jacinda Ardern's successor Chris Hipkins must grapple with high inflation, looming recession, and weak poll numbers.
Nicolas Claxton (Brooklyn Nets) with a block vs the Philadelphia 76ers, 01/25/2023
Ardern chose self-preservation—and she did it without apology, without prompting, and without shame.
Rainbow Rutherford scheduled a Trans Life Q&A event starting at 11:30 a.m. Saturday at a booked meeting room in Linebaugh Library in Murfreesboro.
A federal agency said Wednesday it is reinstating restrictions on road-building and logging on the country's largest national forest in southeast Alaska, the latest move in a long-running fight over the Tongass National Forest. The U.S. Department of Agriculture in late 2021 announced that it was beginning the process of repealing a Trump administration-era decision that exempted the Tongass — a rainforest that is also home to rugged coastal islands and glaciers — from the so-called roadless rule.
Several inches of snow fell across the Chicago area Wednesday, as the edges of a massive national storm system reached northern Illinois and Indiana.
A court in Mali has sentenced a man to death over a 2019 attack that killed three United Nations peacekeepers, the peacekeeping mission MINUSMA said on Wednesday without naming the defendant. Mali, an arid West African country run by a military junta, has been struggling for a decade with an Islamist insurgency that has spread across the wider Sahel region despite costly international efforts to quash it. U.N. peacekeepers have been deployed in Mali since 2013 but their presence has not stopped militants linked to al Qaeda and Islamic State from attacking villages and towns, army bases and police stations.
Meta Platforms Inc said Wednesday it will reinstate former U.S. President Donald Trump's Facebook and Instagram accounts in the coming weeks, following a two-year suspension after the deadly Capitol Hill riot on January 6, 2021. The restoration of his accounts could provide a boost to Trump, who announced in November he will make another run for the White House in 2024. His Twitter account was restored in November by new owner Elon Musk, though Trump has yet to post there.
Northrop Grumman CEO Kathy Warden highlighted the recently revealed B-21 Raider stealth bomber during the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call on Thursday.
Champions are made in the offseason.
The Ukrainian command confirmed for the first time that the Armed Forces of Ukraine had withdrawn from the city of Soledar on Jan. 25 after the Ukrainian military had completed the main tasks of defending the city, as well as depleting the enemy and holding the front line.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump's potential return to Meta Platform's Facebook and Instagram is unlikely to change how advertisers spend money with the world's second-largest digital ad company, ad agency executives said. This is good news for Meta whose stock has halved over the past year amid a slowdown in ad spending as brands cut their marketing budgets in response to historic inflation. In a blog post on Wednesday announcing Trump's reinstatement, Meta said he will face "heightened penalties for repeat offenses."
"I have yet to find a 'laughable' moment, as Mr. Hooper alluded to in his pleadings," writes the woman who accused Hooper of sexually assaulting her.
John Durham, appointed by Bill Barr, relied on claims from Russian intelligence analysts to obtain a US citizen's emails, The New York Times reported.
'Trump Organization' is branding shorthand, so it can't be sued, the defendants said repeatedly in the lengthy court filing.
Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/GettyRussia is building up a network of fortifications and trenches along the front in Ukraine, in apparent anticipation of a new round of heavy fighting, according to satellite imagery analysis shared exclusively with The Daily Beast.The analysis from Brady Africk, an open-source intelligence analyst, shows that Russia is building up fortifications all along the front in Luhansk, from the Russian border down to Donetsk, and throughout Zaporizhzhia and Kherson.The
Charles C.W. Cooke tore into the former president in a scathing new column.
Let's try to consider the potential disintegration of Russia from a historical perspective
John Durham's secret criminal investigation reportedly involved Trump, not Clinton or the FBI
The Times Union slammed Stefanik's silence on the scandals engulfing serial liar congressman Santos.