A proposal for the overdue changes is reportedly underway.
A judge in a case against a man accused of assaulting an ICE officer held the juror in contempt for conducting independent research.
The world is on fire, and bipartisanship won't put it out.
The lobbyist caught admitting internal strategy on tape has apologized, while Exxon seeks to distance itself.
Their name doesn't begin to describe the wonders of what heat pump technology can do for the home and the planet.
A sting by Greenpeace UK exposes how the company talks a big climate game while ensuring nothing actually gets done.
The tech giant thinks that Lina Khan, the Federal Trade Commission's new chairwoman, has been too critical of its practices in the past. Sweet.
Fox News host Tucker Carlson says the NSA is spying on him and implies whatever they found could end his show.
The documentary, "The Deep Rig," was directed by a man whose prior credits include a film claiming aliens did 9/11.
A new study shows that if people are going to continue living in urban centers, those centers can't be car-dependent.
What's more, the administration is going on the offensive against Indigenous and environmental groups.
The UK may greenlight a huge new oil project just months before it hosts a "last-chance" global climate summit. Greta isn't having it.
No one really knows why Buffett would make such an announcement at this particular time.
The Fox News host is losing his mind over something a random professor said five years ago.
Windmills "kill everything," according to the guy who thinks they also cause cancer.
In so many words, the President said Wednesday that he hoped the Russian leader would be less of a dick in the future but that, eh, whaddaya gonna do?
The timeline fight over all-electric mail vehicles is headed to federal court.
President Biden's moratorium on federal oil and gas leasing was struck down—by a Trump-appointed judge.
An attorney for Richard "Bigo" Barnett wrote that classic cars are his "lifelong hobby," not that other thing he's being tried for.
One DOJ official referred to the allegations as "pure insanity."