Biden stopped attack ads during Trump's hospital stay. Trump didn't.
"If the rule is that you don't attack the guy in the hospital, why would the President pull down his own ads?" asked the Trump campaign's top spokesperson.
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"If the rule is that you don't attack the guy in the hospital, why would the President pull down his own ads?" asked the Trump campaign's top spokesperson.
The announcement represents an about-face for the company, which has previously said it would not fact-check political ads made by presidential candidates.
Former patients have long criticized a 2016 plea agreement that allowed former gynecologist Robert Hadden to avoid prison time.
The Manhattan District Attorney's Office has described the investigation as "intensely active."
The allegations against Robert Hadden received renewed attention this year after Evelyn Yang, whose husband Andrew sought the Democratic nomination for president, said Hadden had assaulted her.
Masks, respirators and sanitizing supplies will soon be regarded as non-emergency supplies for schools and many other local institutions.
A complaint released Thursday evening describes a chaotic scene as a suspect opened fire multiple times, killing two and injuring one.
Blake was paralyzed Sunday when he was shot in the back seven times by an officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
The government is trying to seize Desert Tech's headquarters, originally purchased by members of the sect who entered guilty pleas in a $1.1 billion fraud scheme.
The last time Mark Zuckerberg testified, he left with a homework assignment: to answer more than 100 questions from Democratic representatives
Why is Border Patrol protecting a federal courthouse and why are other federal agents being sent to other cities?
Diehard supporters of the presidential candidates are giving away their friends' info without asking for permission.
Lawsuit challenges new federal rules that could leave transgender patients vulnerable to discrimination in health care.
The move erases Obama-era rules amid a pandemic, leaving a patchwork of state laws in place
A posting on a government contracting website indicates the U.S. Army wants 500 riot control face shields