WATCH: Toddler emerges from overturned car after police pursuit

A mother is in custody after authorities in Arkansas performed a maneuver to stop her car…

Senators introduce bill to abolish military draft agency

A bipartisan group of lawmakers unveiled legislation on Thursday that would dismantle the government agency responsible…

Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin faces a difficult task: improve the department’s image while still implementing President Trump’s central campaign promise of mass deportations

Secretary Markwayne Mullin faces a difficult task: improve the department’s image while still implementing President Trump’s…

The Southern Poverty Law Center built a fortune opposing Trump during his first term. The president is now trying to crush it. The antiracism group faces federal charges it says are bogus.

SPLC faces federal charges and has come under fire for accumulating a nearly $800 million war…

Louisiana’s hot mess of a Senate primary tells us a much bigger story. Read more in today’s WSJ Politics newsletter:

Plus, the U.S. and China offer different ideas of what a reset in relations means, and…

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker is taking a page from other blue states to combat a housing shortage, proposing that Illinois take some control away from local authorities

A “Yes in My Backyard” bill backed by Gov. JB Pritzker is designed to create affordable…

House Passes Ethanol Bill, But Fate Uncertain in Senate

Advocates for ethanol blended gasoline got a long-awaited win in the House, but a bill allowing…

Republican and Democratic lawmakers on Friday assailed the Pentagon’s decision to cancel the deployment of an armored brigade to Poland, saying the move caught them and U.S. allies by surprise

Members of Congress say they were not consulted about the halted deployment of a 4,000-strong armored…

Young men are turning to peptides in search of perfection, hearing loss might be linked to walking speed and a quarantine ‘hotel’ got a new patient. Read more in this week’s WSJ Health newsletter:

Plus, why hearing loss might be linked to walking speed and how a quarantine ‘hotel’ got…

Twenty people in Japan who took an Amgen rare immune-disease drug have died, according to the company that sells the medicine in Japan. U.S. drug regulators had asked Amgen to voluntarily withdraw the drug.

Kissei Pharmaceutical, which sells the rare immune-disease drug in Japan, warned doctors to stop prescribing it…