Wrap Up The Year With PurposeThis newsroom tells stories that reflect real lives and real stakes. Your support ensures that work continues. Join as a member today and close the year by strengthening independent reporting for all. Already a member? Log in to hide these messages.

December 04, 2025 17:21 UTC

LOADING ERROR LOADINGDefense Secretary Pete Hegseth risked endangering U.S. military personnel when he used the commercial messaging app Signal to discuss real-time war plans, a report by the Pentagon’s acting inspector general released Thursday has found. Hegseth “holds the authority to determine the required classification level” of the information he communicates, it stated. In a statement on X on Wednesday, chief Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said the report “is a TOTAL exoneration of Secretary Hegseth and proves what we knew all along - no classified information was shared. This matter is resolved, and the case is closed.”AdvertisementHegseth also took to social media to call the review a “total exoneration,” writing: “No classified information. Total exoneration.

December 04, 2025 17:05 UTC

I find her embarrassing and pathetic honestly.”Campins, a Fox Business contributor and host, spun Ball’s outrage into a gush over Sweeney and the GOP. “They’re like, ‘She is so Republican.’ She gets hotter by the minute, right. NBC via Getty ImagesRose said she was once attached to play Christy Martin’s girlfriend in “Christy.”“Everyone had experience with the core material. “None of ‘the people’ want to see someone who hates them, parading around pretending to be us.”Pivoting to a rebuke directly at Sweeney, Rose added, “You’re a cretin and you ruined the film. Christy deserved better.”Sydney Sweeney at a New York screening of her new movie "The Housemaid" on Dec. 2, 2025.

December 04, 2025 16:41 UTC

The lawsuit, which also names Hegseth and Pentagon chief spokesman Sean Parnell as defendants, argues the Pentagon’s media policy is unlawful and unconstitutional. The Times is seeking a court order requiring the Pentagon to reinstate Times reporters’ badges and stop the department from implementing and enforcing its restrictive press policy. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is a defendant in a lawsuit filed by The New York Times on Thursday. “We are aware of the New York Times lawsuit and look forward to addressing these arguments in court,” Parnell said in a statement to HuffPost. Major news organizations, including HuffPost, the Times and conservative outlets Fox News and Newsmax, refused to sign on to Hegseth’s demands.

December 04, 2025 16:03 UTC

The Trump administration says all 11 people aboard were killed. The questions are expected to emerge Thursday during a classified congressional briefing with the commander that the Trump administration says ordered the second strike, Adm. Frank “Mitch” Bradley. The Pentagon did not respond Wednesday to a request for comment about the reported new details about the Sept. 2 attack. Some legal experts and lawmakers say that strike would have violated peacetime laws and those governing armed conflict. AdvertisementThe information about the follow-on strike was not presented to lawmakers during a classified briefing in September, in the days after the incident.

December 04, 2025 15:49 UTC





H-1B visas, which allow U.S. employers to hire foreign workers in specialty fields, are crucial for U.S. tech companies which recruit heavily from countries including India and China. Many of those companies’ leaders threw their support behind Trump in the last presidential election. Details on the enhanced vetting for H-1B visas, including the focus on censorship and free speech, have not been previously reported. The Trump administration has made free speech, particularly what it sees as the stifling of conservative voices online, a focus of its foreign policy. As part of his wide-ranging crackdown on immigration, Trump in September imposed new fees on H-1B visas.

December 04, 2025 15:02 UTC

This Holiday Tells A StoryThis year, the holidays don’t feel celebratory for many Americans who’ve been negatively affected by the Trump administration’s decisions. We’re here to make sure those people do not go unheard. Help us hold the administration accountable. Already a member? Log in to hide these messages.

December 04, 2025 14:59 UTC

Given that Friday night football and wrestling were at the heart of the community, I felt like I belonged. I sat with that moment for a week before texting him: “What happened the other night really messed with me and it still bothers me. At one point, my back hit the mat and all I could feel was what I’d felt that night. Procedurally, it felt like justice, but nothing about my life felt normal anymore. I didn’t tell any of my teammates or my friends or family what had happened — my parents finally just found out this year.

December 04, 2025 14:58 UTC

Brian Cole, a 30-year-old from Virginia, has been identified as the suspect, according to multiple reports. The pipe bombs were placed outside the headquarters of the DNC and the RNC on Jan. 5, 2021, the eve of the Capitol insurrection. In the ensuing chaos, police resources were diverted to responding to the pipe bombs and away from the Capitol attack as it was unfolding. “We were dealing with two pipe bombs that were specifically set right off the edge of our perimeter to, what I suspect, draw resources away,” Sund told lawmakers. But the language included in the pardon did not seem to apply to the person responsible for the pipe bombs, according to NBC News.

December 04, 2025 14:56 UTC

This Holiday Tells A StoryThis year, the holidays don’t feel celebratory for many Americans who’ve been negatively affected by the Trump administration’s decisions. We’re here to make sure those people do not go unheard. Help us hold the administration accountable. Already a member? Log in to hide these messages.

December 04, 2025 14:08 UTC

This Holiday Tells A StoryThis year, the holidays don’t feel celebratory for many Americans who’ve been negatively affected by the Trump administration’s decisions. We’re here to make sure those people do not go unheard. Help us hold the administration accountable. Already a member? Log in to hide these messages.

December 04, 2025 13:54 UTC

Wrap Up The Year With PurposeThis newsroom tells stories that reflect real lives and real stakes. Your support ensures that work continues. Join as a member today and close the year by strengthening independent reporting for all. Already a member? Log in to hide these messages.

December 04, 2025 12:04 UTC

The scrutiny surrounding Hegseth’s brash leadership style is surfacing what has been long-building discontent in Congress over President Donald Trump’s choice to helm the U.S. military. Vice President JD Vance, who cast a rare tiebreaking vote to confirm Hegseth, has vigorously defended him in the attack. ... And so, for that reason and others, they just, they don’t like him.”Tension between some Republican lawmakers and the Pentagon has been rising for months. As he defends his job, Hegseth has spoken to both Wicker and Rogers, the top lawmakers overseeing the military. Rogers said he was “satisfied” with Hegseth after that conversation, while Wicker said that he told Hegseth that he would like him to testify to Congress.

December 04, 2025 11:46 UTC

LOADING ERROR LOADINGFox News senior medical analyst Dr. Marc Siegel on Tuesday cooked up a wild excuse for President Donald Trump’s apparent sleepy time at a recent Cabinet meeting. We wouldn’t have electricity, right?” said Siegel of Edison, who invented an early version of the incandescent light bulb (not electricity). “This is a disgrace because we don’t need to see President Trump passing cognitive tests, as you just said, he passes one every single day,” Siegel argued. “What President Trump does on a daily basis. If you sleep three hours or four hours a night, you’re probably going to close your eyes, whether you are 79 or 49.

December 04, 2025 09:59 UTC

Supplied DJ AG performs in a care home and encourages residents to sing and dance along. A North London-based DJ is bringing cheer to UK care homes this winter with his charm and toe-tapping beats. “The reason I started performing in care homes goes back to my grandmother,” he told HuffPost UK. Performing in care homes is my way of reminding them that they’re not forgotten. “They matter, and they deserve our time, our presence, and our respect.”If you work at a care home and would like DJ AG to visit, email: info@djagonline.com.

December 04, 2025 07:01 UTC