2 killed in shooting at popular Midtown club
HPD Chief Troy Finner said an off-duty deputy working security heard shots inside Clé nightclub, saw the shooter and fired.
She called hosting “Jeopardy!” one of the most iconic things she will do in her career.
Household members of any person identified as a close contact of a COVID-19 case will have to isolate themselves immediately, even if the person has not tested positive for COVID-19 yet.
The workers are accusing Houston Methodist of "forcing its employees to be human 'guinea pigs' as a condition for continued employment."
The former E! host gets candid about her new podcast and not feeling guilty about self-care.
"No pay for those who abandon their responsibilities," Texas Gov. Greg Abbott wrote on Twitter when announcing his plan.
Former national security adviser has become a prominent figure in the QAnon conspiracy movement since leaving the White House
The military officer says the senator was providing American adversaries with talking points
Actor Blair Underwood and his wife, Desiree DaCosta, have announced they're ending their marriage after 27 years. In a joint statement posted to Instagram, the couple called their marriage “a beautiful journey" and praised their three children, ages 24, 22 and 19.
Stewart Rhodes allegedly wanted former president ‘to declare an insurrection, and to call us up as the militia’
It’s likely the piranha was a pet that was released into the lake.
The "Office" actor and the "Devil Wears Prada" star have been married since 2010 and share two daughters: Hazel, 7, and Violet, 4.
Cataclysmic violence brought death and destruction to Tulsa in 1921. Systemic injustice ensured Black Wall Street would never return, but Greenwood keeps fighting, Alex Woodward writes
Texas Democrat explains how bill in Texas is going to reduce suffrage across Texas in already underrepresented communities
Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving prime minister, was closer than ever on Sunday night to finally leaving office. A series of extraordinary political twists have produced a diverse coalition containing left-wing parties, right-wing parties that support the West Bank settlement movement, centrist parties, and the party that represents the Islamic Movement in Israel, whose voters are mostly Palestinian-Israelis. What they all have in common is their revulsion for Benjamin Netanyahu, who is standing trial on a string of corruption charges. The government has not yet been sworn in, and the Israeli political system is used to seeing Netanyahu wriggle out of every political crisis at the last minute. But this time, most of the players believe, his chances are slimmer than ever. The “change coalition”, as it is known, looked like a non-starter a week ago. Its designated leader, former defence minister Naftali Bennett, the leader of the Yamina right-wing party, announced that the renewed fighting with Gaza and the riots in Israel between Arabs and Jews had convinced him that this coalition stood no chance. A few days ago, it became clear once more that there was no chance of Netanyahu establishing a right-wing government, and Bennett resumed talks with the chief architect of the alternative government-in-waiting, the chairman of the centrist Yesh Atid Party, Yair Lapid. On Sunday night, Bennett appeared on live TV and said that he would form a positive-minded government that would appeal to all Israelis, and which would be “more right-wing than the current government”. He thanked the left for its “generosity”, but promised that the new government would not “relinquish territory” or pursue unilateral withdrawals. From these remarks, it is easy to understand the challenges facing the new government: it brings together progressive left-wing parties with a religious right-wing party, all headed by a prime minister who will control just six seats in the 120-seat Knesset. This government patently is making no pretence of pursuing a peace process with the Palestinians, and it is also clear that it cannot propose sweeping reforms in the domain of religion and state, a critical issue for so many Israelis. The fall of Benjamin Netanyahu cannot be chalked up to the strength of the Israeli centre-left, which remains a minority in Israeli society, but to the rise of the a conservative right which opposes his rule, and identifies his brand of leadership as “Bibism”: a cult of loyalty to the leader himself above all other ideological principles. Israel has been dragged through four election cycles in the last two years, and in none of them did the bloc of parties that support Netanyahu manage to obtain a majority in the Knesset, the Israeli parliament. In the last election, a centrist party joined forces with Netanyahu to form a government that was supposed to include a rotating premiership between Netanyahu and his rival Benny Gantz; but Netanyahu violated the agreement the moment he signed it and pushed the country toward elections, because he refused to relinquish his seat — not even in two years’ time. In the fourth elections, it turned out that again that Netanyahu had no majority, and two right-wing parties announced that they would not support him. They have just been joined by the party of the prime minister-in-waiting, Naftali Bennett. These right-wing parties decided to abandon Netanyahu’s bloc for a host of reasons, but the commonly cited reason is their leaders’ intense lack of trust in Netanyahu, their sense that the country has had enough of his long rule, and a consensus that his government is crippled by chronic decision-making difficulties and that it sows division – and that preventing a 5th election in two years is of paramount importance. If a new government is indeed formed in the next week, it will turn out that Netanyahu was not replaced because of the left, but because of a growing agreement on the right flank of Israeli politics that it’s time for change. Nadav Eyal is a leading Israeli journalist and columnist for the Israeli daily Yediot Ahronot
Texas' GOP lieutenant governor suggests Republicans only have themselves to blame for Democrats killing election bill
Joe Lara played the role of Tarzan in a television series in the mid-1990s
The Russian military will form 20 new units in the country's west this year to counter what it claims is a growing threat from NATO. Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu made the announcement Monday at a meeting with top military officials.
The new name will go into effect on 1 November
The video circulating on Twitter shows the crowd cheering the suggestion of a coup in the US
Six years after donning a Dallas Mavericks’ jersey, the Los Angeles Clippers’ point guard is still proving to be a thorn for all who rep Big D.