
Federal judge permanently bars Trump’s effort to require proof of citizenship to vote
The Boston magistrate expands her preliminary ruling, arguing the president does not have the authority to change US election rules

The Boston magistrate expands her preliminary ruling, arguing the president does not have the authority to change US election rules

Forty years ago, on June 22, 1986, self‑taught Mexican photographer Alejandro Ojeda Carbajal achieved a world scoop: the shot confirming Argentina’s opening goal was scored with the iconic player’s fist

Analysis of 27 genomes reveals more diverse, better-connected populations and challenges the idea that genetic decline caused their disappearance

The ruling overturns a lower court order that had suspended the expansion of the measure

The incident involving the Durango leader comes at a time of heightened tension with the United States, which has opened investigations linking several senior Mexican officials to drug trafficking

Her left-wing rival, Roberto Sánchez, alleges fraud and refuses to concede defeat

A study finds that parents’ digital habits directly shape children’s mental health

According to the list of its 47 members obtained by EL PAÍS, 17 are in favor of hydraulic fracturing and only seven are critical academics

‘Artificial’ recounts the turbulent days of 2023, when the company’s CEO, Sam Altman — portrayed by Andrew Garfield — was fired and then rehired

The president-elect of Colombia has supported building mega-prisons, scaling back bureaucracy and withdrawing the country from the United Nations system. He’ll face opposition from half the country

With nearly 70 victims among civilian seafarers, the war against Iran has been one of the deadliest conflicts for the merchant navy. More than 20,000 workers found themselves trapped in the Persian Gulf

While the nation awaits the Supreme Court’s imminent decision on the future of birthright citizenship, which the president wants to eliminate, the U.S. team’s top scorer at the World Cup can only play for the country thanks to that right

Lengthy wait times are leaving many DACA beneficiaries in limbo and without work permits, including law enforcement officers

Jack Schlossberg, Kennedy’s grandson, fails in his bid for the House and finishes a humiliating third. The NYC mayor is no longer just an individual. He is a political movement