Breaking News: Politics
- LIVE: Officials from Denmark and Greenland hold news conference after U.S. talks - Officials from Denmark and Greenland held a news conference after meeting with Trump administration officials.
- Sen. Warren says Trump called her to work on credit card interest rate caps - Republicans on Capitol Hill have lightly thrown cold water on capping credit card interest at 10%.
- Russia watches as ally Iran edges closer to collapse. Here's why it matters for Moscow - The prospect of another ally falling in the Middle East will be a worrying one for Moscow, particularly after it has seen other alliances collapse recently.
- Tariffs and AI's downside pose top global risks for business, World Economic Forum says - The report captures a shifting landscape where geoeconomic confrontation leaps to the top spot on the list of business worries over the next two years
- What's at stake as Greenland and Denmark prepare for a White House showdown - The high-stakes meeting comes shortly after Greenland and Denmark's leaders portrayed a united front against Trump's takeover threats.
- South Korea's special prosecutor seeks death penalty for ex-president Yoon over martial law bid - If Yoon is sentenced to death, it will be the first execution South Korea has carried out in almost 30 years.
- Oil prices rise more than 2% after Trump cancels meetings with Iran, tells protesters help is on the way - President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to intervene if the Islamic Republic kills protestors.
- A major development in Trump's Fed feud is set to happen next week in the Supreme Court - Supreme Court arguments on Jan. 21 will likely be the next big development for the central bank's quest to maintain independence.
- Trump attacks Powell again amid Fed independence fears: 'Incompetent' or 'crooked' - JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon defended the Fed's independence amid the probe of Powell by Trump's DOJ, echoing Republicans' criticisms.
- JPMorgan Chase says banks could fight Trump credit card rate cap: 'Everything's on the table' - Banks say a proposed 10% cap on credit card interest rates would result in fewer credit card accounts for Americans and a hit to the U.S. economy.