Front Page Podcast
The Washington Times Front Page podcast delivers our top news stories in an easy-to-listen format. Host George Gerbo brings you the stories from our front page five days a week in five minutes or less.
Listen here or click the RSS icon () below to subscribe. Available on Apple Podcasts, Google, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Recent Stories
Biden forces cap on nearly all plant emissions by 2032, further strains electrical grid
The Biden administration on Thursday finalized new rules that drastically cut emissions from natural gas and coal-fired power plants, which will force some to shut down unless they make expensive upgrades.
Biden administration scrambles to finalize rules, fearing Trump could undo them
President Biden is scrambling to finish a slew of federal regulations by the end of April, fearing that a second Trump presidency will reverse his legacy.
With guns on the way, Ukraine scrounges for the soldiers to fire them
After months of deadlock, the U.S. Congress has finally approved $61 billion in badly needed military aid to Ukraine. But in a painful irony, with Ukraine's government struggling to replenish the ranks of its army, there may not be enough soldiers to man the new guns and fire the new shells.
GOP tightens rules on pork-barrel spending after LGBT blowup
Congressional Republicans, stung by embarrassing projects that slipped into spending bills this year, announced rules Thursday to limit the types of pork-barrel projects that can be funded.
Supreme Court struggles with immunity for presidents over official acts
Supreme Court justices clashed Thursday over former President Donald Trump's claims of "absolute immunity" from prosecution for his official acts in the White House as they sorted through competing dangers of an unleashed president on the one hand or a crippled commander in chief on the other.
U.S. birthrate falls to 100-year low, triggering economic worries
The U.S. birthrate has dropped to its lowest point in more than 100 years, triggering concerns about the nation's economic future with a lack of fresh blood to replenish an aging workforce.