Jonah Green
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
The ceasefire, which Russian President Vladimir Putin announced as a humanitarian gesture, ends at midnight, with the Kremlin saying that Russian troops will immediately resume fighting.
Dozens of people were killed in a stampede Saturday at one of Haiti's most popular tourist sites, and officials warn the death toll could rise.
The stampede happened at the entrance of the La Ferrière Citadel, a 19th-century fortress packed with students and visitors for an annual celebration of the UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Rain made the disaster worse, according to local officials, and it's still unclear how many people were injured or who the victims are.
A federal appeals court says construction can continue on President Trump's controversial White House ballroom, at least until a district court clarifies its ruling halting work.
The $400 million project would replace the demolished East Wing with a massive new ballroom, but preservationists say Trump illegally razed the historic building without congressional approval.
The White House argues that halting construction leaves the building open and exposed and threatens security.
The Manhattan District Attorney's Office is investigating sexual assault allegations against Representative Eric Swalwell, a California Democrat and leading candidate for governor.
Multiple women have accused Swalwell of sexual misconduct, including one who told CNN he raped her in a New York hotel in 2024.
They're absolutely false.
They did not happen.
They have never happened.
Swalwell denies the allegations as absolutely false, but Democrats are calling on him to drop his gubernatorial bid, and a Republican lawmaker plans to file a motion to expel him from Congress.
We're entering the final stretch of the Supreme Court's term at a time when Republicans control the White House and the Senate, but we're also in a midterm year, which could shift the balance of power in the Senate.
That possibility, however remote, has opened the door for renewed questions into the retirement for some of the court's senior-most justices.
John Krusel reports that the discussion has mostly revolved around Justice Clarence Thomas, who is 77, and Justice Samuel Alito, who is 76.
The data centers powering the AI revolution require a lot of energy.
The electric grid is seeing more demand than ever before.
And the Trump administration is looking at deregulation and rollbacks of emissions standards as a possible solution, powering AI with coal.
That's Barbara Johnson, who lives with her husband in Florissant, Missouri.