Yahoo News photographer Gordon Donovan recently returned to the scenes of many memorable images taken in New York City on Sept. 11, 2001. Donovan photographed the same areas to show what has changed since the terrorist attacks 16 years ago. New obstacles have arisen, requiring some adjustments in camera angles to align with the original images. This is the sixth time Donovan has revisited the New York skyline; each year presents new challenges as the New York City landscape changes. (Yahoo News) See more news-related photo galleries and follow us on Yahoo News Photo Twitter and Tumblr.
“There is no current, credible actionable threat, terrorist threat, against the homeland,” Tom Bossert, President Trump’s homeland security adviser, told reporters just days before the 9/11 anniversary.
Many Republicans in Congress were reeling after President Trump’s unexpected deal with House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to raise the national debt limit and keep the federal government funded in exchange for Hurricane Harvey relief. With his collaboration with “Chuck and Nancy,” as Trump labeled them, the president snubbed the congressional GOP leadership’s plans while handing Democrats leverage to push their own big agenda items, such as passing a law to grant legal status to undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as young children.
President Trump defended his decision to cut a deal with Democratic leaders in Congress by pointing out that Republicans failed to pass key legislation this summer.
Hillary Clinton calls candidate Donald Trump "flagrantly sexist" in her soon-to-be-released book reflecting on the 2016 presidential election.
Citing its privacy policy, Facebook refused requests to release copies of the political ads it sold to what investigators say is a Kremlin-linked Russian troll factory during last year's election.
In order to enroll in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, Maria Praeli was required to provide the federal government a trove of personal documents, including her birth certificate, current and previous home addresses, phone numbers, school and medical records, as well as biometric data such as fingerprints and a photo ID.
Prominent Catholics and evangelicals are united in their belief that ending the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, also known as DACA, is contrary to the spirit of the Bible and the United States.
President Trump said Thursday that he would prefer not going to war with North Korea over that country’s escalating nuclear and missile programs, but he warned that “certainly that could happen.”
Nancy Pelosi says she asked President Trump to reassure young unauthorized immigrants spooked by his decision to revoke the DACA program.
Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon says it’s “obvious” why top members of the Catholic Church would be opposed to President Trump’s decision to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.
Republicans can either hold firm to the conservative argument that idealizes our tradition of assimilating immigrants, or they can allow their party to be transformed by Trumpism.
President Trump sided with Democratic leadership in a deal to keep the government open another three months.
The Vermont senator says he isn’t interested in rehashing the 2016 presidential race and is too busy protecting progressive interests from Trump’s legislative agenda.
In her soon-to-be-released 2016 election memoir, Hillary Clinton takes on her numerous enemies and opponents — and supporters, including then-Vice President Joe Biden, who criticized her campaign for its supposed neglect of middle-class voters. CNN was able to buy an early copy of “What Happened,” Clinton’s firsthand account of her election loss to President Trump, which is scheduled to go on sale next week. “Joe Biden said the Democratic Party in 2016 ‘did not talk about what it always stood for — and that was how to maintain a burgeoning middle class,'” Clinton wrote.
Interviewed on CBS Wednesday morning, the Republican governor of Ohio criticized President Trump’s decision to phase out DACA and also lobbed a challenge at Congress, which is now faced with extending or replacing the program.
As part of a push for tax reform, President Trump bemoaned that the United States is the most heavily taxed nation on earth — but that's not true.
President Trump’s decision to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program led to protests across the country, including one all day Tuesday in front of the White House.
Former President Barack Obama condemned the White House’s move to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, also known as DACA, on Tuesday.
Despite now being at greater risk for deportation, DACA recipients from around the country have taken to social media — and to the streets — to speak out against the controversial move.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced Tuesday that the Trump administration has terminated DACA.
“I am proud to be a Democrat," the former Democratic nominee writes in her upcoming campaign memoir. "And I wish Bernie were, too.”
Trump on Tuesday scrapped DACA, a program that protects from deportation almost 800,000 young men and women who were brought into the United States illegally as children.
President Obama walks with a letter before he departs the Oval Office for the final time as sitting president, Jan. 20, 2017. Before leaving the White House in January, President Barack Obama left President Trump a handwritten letter congratulating his successor and offering “a few reflections” from his eight years in the Oval Office. “Dear Mr. President,” Obama wrote in the letter, the contents of which were obtained by CNN and published on Sunday.
On Sept. 3 North Korea claimed its most powerful nuclear test so far. Here are some of the ways the country flexes its military muscles.