Former President Donald Trump lost an important round with the Justice Department recently, when the department chose to file a brief not taking his side in the fight over his responsibility for the Jan. 6 riots. The department generally takes a broad view of executive privilege. But even a broad view has limits.
Democratic and Republican Senators on Capitol Hill reacted Thursday to President Joe Biden’s 10 year budget plan proposal, which largely revol…
Selma slander misrepresents reality
Admit it or not, like it or not, George Santos is cut from authentic American cloth. Yes, he’s a current version, writ large, of the universal trickster, con artist and charlatan.
Punches were thrown on a Southwest Airlines plane in Dallas on Monday, according to a witness and video, marking the latest incident of unruly…
🎧 The hosts discuss possible fixes, along with what actually seems to be stopping us from addressing this problem.
Visit one of our kindergarten classrooms on the first day of school and know that many of those children will not still be classmates at the e…
Last fall, several articles covered state Rep. Kevin Windham’s proposal to create a St. Louis County land bank to address the growing problem …
Rosemary Church interviews the ACLU's Lee Gelernt about President Biden's immigration plans after Title 42 runs out, including the possibility…
The Republican majority in the House isn’t even two months old, but it’s already clear that Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s attempt to mollify his party’s extremist faction risks hurting the country without guaranteeing the thing he wants most: to keep his job as House leader.
More than 30 million Americans — that’s one in 11 of us — have diabetes.
In my life as a rabbi, it’s common for me to hear Jews passionately expressing their dissatisfaction with the latest portrayal of Jews in the mass media: from the Netflix film “You People” to The New York Times coverage of Hasidic schools to Fox News host Tucker Carlson’s gleeful promotion of Jewish anti-LGBTQ influencer Chaya Raichik.
The St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department was under state control from the Civil War to 2012. Local control resumed in 2013, but a bill int…
My Aunt Eva was covered by Medicaid until her death at age 105. But, despite no longer having a family member eligible for Medicaid, the fact …
The housing lobby wins again, but taxpayers could lose in a recession.
Construction on the new I-270 Chain of Rocks Bridge over the Mississippi River marks another significant milestone for infrastructure investme…
President Biden attends event in Selma Alabama marking the 58th anniversary of Bloody Sunday
When do clocks spring forward 2023? The Daylight Saving time change will happen on March 12.
Missouri played host to one of the most important speeches of the 20th century when Winston Churchill spoke at Missouri’s Westminster College …
Technology and innovation have spurred a rapid shift in the health care landscape. In light of these changes, policymakers must reassess how t…
Shrugging response to a death in broad daylight drives home St. Louis' dysfunction.
In this edition of 'Eyewitness News Extra Time,' we detail the cloud of controversy that grows even larger around embattled Congressman George…
We can all agree that Alec Baldwin did not mean to kill cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, leaving her husband a widower and her then-9-year-old son motherless. He should not be, and was not, charged with murder. But nor should this killing be brushed off as an accident, a tragedy of working with superstars in which a family’s only hope is to squeeze some money out in civil proceedings.
The unintentional shooting death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins in 2021 on the set of the film “Rust” in New Mexico is tragic. But not all tragedies translate to criminal behavior and being accused of a crime.