
Congress to Certify Trump’s Election, With Memories of Riot Looming Large
A joint session of the House and Senate is set to convene at 1 p.m. to perform a ritual that was once considered ceremonial and uneventful.
The Jan. 6 Rioters, 4 Years Later
Hundreds of rioters accused of nonviolent crimes during the attack on the Capitol have wrapped up their cases. Here’s what some of their lives look like now.
Biden scolds reporters saying he ‘knows more world leaders’ than they do in their whole ‘goddamn’ lives
President Biden has a history of attacking reporters.
UN watchdog group urges dismantling of UNRWA for ‘enabling crimes against humanity’
“UNRWA is no longer a humanitarian agency — it has become a full-fledged partner to terrorist organizations like Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad,” said Hillel Neuer, executive director of UN Watch, to The Post.
Amazon Prime Will Release a Melania Trump Documentary
The film, billed by the company as a “behind-the-scenes” look at her life, started shooting in December and is slated for theatrical and streaming release later this year.
NY accused of offering NJ drivers measly $3 break on hated congestion toll in secret doomed talks
“Talk about chutzpah — New Jersey walked away from a deal that would’ve helped their own constituents, all because they refused a deal where New York and New Jersey commuters were treated equally,” a New York source said.
Chinese hackers ran amok in US telecom network for 18 months — got info on over 1 million people: report
China-linked hackers reportedly managed to sneak into a US telecommunications surveillance system network for 18 months undetected and amass data on over 1 million people, with the full extent of their shenanigans still unknown.
Group launches $7M effort to mobilize Jewish voters for NYC races — including for mayor
Such an effort could make a big difference because overall turnout at the Democratic primaries is usually low — and whoever wins the Dem primaries in races such as for City Hall usually score in November.
Legal Issues Will Follow Trump Into Office, With New York Sentencing Set
Donald Trump may not face a penalty for his conviction in the hush-money case, but he could still be the first felon to be president — and civil proceedings against him continue.