Some say the expected action does not go far enough, while other say it spoils the chance for broader reform.
Education Department Drops New No Child Left Behind Waiver Guidance
Futurology: Internet Didn't Outrun TV, Newspapers
John Doar: The Gary Cooper of the Civil Rights Movement
Top Defense Officials Say More Personnel Could Be Headed to Iraq
Israel Is the Middle East Ally the U.S. Cannot Lose
Obama, Net Neutrality and the Future of the Internet
Democrats Failed to Address Middle-Class Economic Worries in 2014
Iraqi forces drive IS from refinery town of Beiji
Surgeon with Ebola coming to US for care
France, Greece help lift eurozone growth
Stocks mostly rise as Europe, Japan data awaited
US, India end impasse that threatened WTO pact
Wal-Mart Sales Perk Up Ahead of Holiday
US-China climate pact seen boosting Indian efforts
European Space Agency: Comet Lander Ends Up in Cliff Shadow
Earthquake shakes parts of Kansas, Oklahoma
Tenn. sheriff pays ransom for case files
Police: Chain saw stolen in Florida thief's pants
Florida Mother, Daughter Give Birth on Same Day
Liberia president to end Ebola state of emergency
India doctor arrested, denies role in women deaths
Death toll in Ebola outbreak passes 5,000
Hagel: Top-to-bottom changes needed in nuke force
AP sources: Millions to get deportation protection
Obama gives blunt assessment of reforms in Myanmar
Clayton Kershaw, Mike Trout win MVP awards
Mavs get their biggest win ever, 123-70 over 76ers
Rose hurts hamstring, Bulls beat Raptors 100-93
In a hotel adjacent to the Capitol, advisers converged to plan a presidential launch.
Part of the $6.2 billion in emergency funding would go toward efforts to fight the disease in West Africa.
Death tolls, government dysfunction and the Islamic State group threaten to sink hopes for Afghanistan - but it's not over yet.
Opposition to $5.6 billion war request, 1,500-troop deployment builds, but it's unclear if skeptics can win.
Mississippi, one of the country's most religious and conservative states, becomes a test case for the South.
House Democrats say the president should move ahead alone on immigration policy.
The president said the U.S. did not fuel the pro-democracy demonstrations.
The FCC chairman may not agree with Obama on regulating Internet like phones.