The Washington Times Front Page Podcast delivers real, trusted news you want to hear in five minutes or less, five days a week. Find all these stories and more at washingtontimes.com/podcasts.
Andy Parks Live From The Washington Times is heard weekday afternoons from 3-6pm. Longtime Washington radio host Andy Parks brings together the very best from one of the nation's premiere newsrooms. From columnists and correspondents, to breaking news and compelling guests, Andy has the very latest on all the stories that matter in our nation's capital. If you read about it in the Washington Times, you can talk about it with Andy Parks on your drive home.
On today's Front Page: The House has removed Rep. Ilhan Omar from the Foreign Affairs Committee for her anti-Israel rhetoric, some Democrats have questioned whether Vice President Harris should remain on the ticket in 2024, and more.
On today's Front Page: House Speaker Kevin McCarthy met with President Biden for one-on-one talks over raising the debt ceiling, two Mexican cartels “pose the greatest criminal drug threat the United States has ever faced,” and more.
On today's Front Page: The White House has been tight-lipped about Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s agenda for a visit to China, auditors are finding state and local governments used taxpayers’ pandemic money on wish-list purchases, and more.
On today's Front Page: NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg is urging South Korea to help supply the Ukrainian war effort, a failure by Congress to raise the debt ceiling could spark a funding crisis for major programs, and more.
On today's Front Page: An inspector general review found Tens of thousands of federal employees stole money by filing bogus pandemic loan requests, a sudden increase in beached whales could be tied to work on offshore wind turbines, and more.
On today's Front Page: An Israeli military raid in the West Bank killed nine suspected Palestinian militants, a web of environmental groups is stepping up the campaign to persuade states and local communities to switch to all-electric energy, and more.
On today's Front Page: The U.S. and Germany announced that they are sending dozens of advanced tanks to Ukraine to help bolster its defenses, the race for RNC chair has turned into an acrimonious affair that has exposed rifts in the party, and more.
On today's Front Page: The Justice Department has filed an antitrust lawsuit against Google over its advertising practices, Germany will send two battalions worth of its Leopard 2 battle tanks to Ukraine, and more.
On today's Front Page: House Republicans plan to block a D.C. crime overhaul that would reduce maximum sentences, a former top FBI counterintelligence official was arrested on charges of conspiring to violate U.S. sanctions on Russia, and more.
On today's Front Page: Law enforcement seized more materials from President Biden's Delaware residence over the weekend, key congressional leaders have floated the idea of trimming the number of military generals and admirals to save money, and more.
On today's Front Page: Attorney General Merrick Garland has named a special counsel to oversee the investigation of classified documents at President Biden's home and former office, Iran will dispatch warships to the Panama Canal this year, and more.
On today's Front Page: The ACLU is urging the FBI to impose new limits on agents’ power to investigate Americans without warrants, the cost of diesel fuel is soaring while regular gas prices fall, and more.
On today's Front Page: D.C. community leaders are enlisting one of the Ten Commandments as part of a campaign to combat a surge of violence, Rep. Matt Gaetz says it’s unlikely Republicans will try to oust House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, and more.
On today's Front Page: House Republicans passed rules making significant changes to the chamber's operations, a combination of Chinese New Year festivities and three years of suppressed demand has led to a spike in international travel, and more.
On today's Front Page: House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s first leadership test is passing the rules package that helped quell his GOP opponents, a national trend of outdoor preschools has accelerated since the start of the pandemic, and more.
On today's Front Page: Kevin McCarthy has lost six-straight votes for speaker of the House as 20 Republicans continue to block his election, last year saw more toy recalls than the previous four years combined, and more.
On today's Front Page: The U.S. House of Representatives is without a speaker after Republican Kevin McCarthy failed to win on three ballots, the shocking injury and hospitalization of Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin have underscored the danger of playing in the NFL, and more.
On today's Front Page: The opening day of the 118th Congress will likely feature a historic fight on the House floor over who will serve as speaker, the National Labor Relations Board has proposed an overhaul of the franchise business model, and more.
On today's Front Page: Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who died Saturday at age 95, is being remembered as a quiet, retiring scholar, homicide rates dipped in 2022, but other violent crimes remained dramatically higher, and more.
On today's Front Page: Russian President Vladimir Putin announces a ban on oil exports to the U.S. and other Western nations, the number of cars stolen nationwide this year is expected to surpass 1 million for the first time, and more.
On today's Front Page: The Supreme Court has ordered the Biden administration to keep the Title 42 border expulsion policy in place, top officials at the Pentagon insist they’ve seen no impact from social policies inside the military, and more.
On today's Front Page: The FBI investigated an American nonprofit at the behest of the Russian government without any accusation of criminal wrongdoing, nearly 60,000 square miles of Ukraine is littered with land mines, and more.
On today's Front Page: Congressional Republicans are preparing to prod the Supreme Court on the leaked draft opinion of the decision overturning Roe v. Wade, gasoline-powered lawn care equipment is increasingly facing bans and restrictions, and more.
On today's Front Page: Officials acknowledge a massive surge of illegal immigration awaits at the end of Title 42, taxpayers’ privacy rights hang in the balance in a Supreme Court case, and more.
On today's Front Page: President Biden says the U.S. will back Ukraine with military and financial aid until Russia‘s invasion ends in failure, RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel absolves herself of responsibility for disappointing elections on her watch, and more.
On today's Front Page: Senate Republican leaders who brokered a spending deal say there is a lot to cheer in the package, a GOP initiative for recruiting and electing diverse candidates saw results in this year’s cycle, and more.
On today's Front Page: The Jan. 6 Committee votes to urge the Justice Department to charge former President Trump for his role in the Capitol riot, U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts orders the Biden administration to keep Title 42 in place, and more.
On today's Front Page: An FBI whistleblower has accused bureau officials of concealing the number of work hours devoted to the Jan. 6 investigation, gauging the President Biden's perception at the end of his second year in office, and more.
On today's Front Page: Russia is claiming “unpredictable consequences” if U.S. pushes ahead with plans to provide Ukraine with the Patriot missile system, the furor over racist comments by Los Angeles City Council members continues, and more.
On today's Front Page: The Pentagon is said to be readying plans to send the Patriot missile system to Ukraine, the Biden administration has revealed plans to rewrite the U.S. citizenship test, and more.
On today's Front Page: Federal prosecutors have charged FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried with defrauding investors, the House Intelligence Committee is set to launch investigations into the use of intelligence agencies to target Americans, and more.
On today's Front Page: Twitter CEO Elon Musk releases another batch of internal communications from the platform, a new study finds using screens to occupy toddlers during tantrums could stunt their emotional development, and more.
On today's Front Page: China’s expanding military activities and economic influence in Africa loom large over a three-day White House summit, House Republicans plan to summon former Twitter executives when they take control of the chamber, and more.
On today's Front Page: Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock defeats Republican Herschel Walker in Georgia’s runoff election, a group of antagonistic House Republicans is looking for a Kevin McCarthy alternative to be the next speaker, and more.
On today's Front Page: The Georgia Senate runoff election reaches the finish line, political views are dictating where people decide to live or work alongside considerations such as cost of living and job opportunities, and more.
On today's Front Page: Georgia Republicans are trying a last-minute push to get voters to turn out in a runoff election Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security will close a migrant detention center in Pennsylvania, and more.
On today's Front Page: The Senate passed urgent legislation to impose a labor agreement between railroad unions and companies, the Supreme Court has rejected President Biden’s request to revive his student debt forgiveness plan, and more.
On today's Front Page: President Biden hosts French President Emmanuel Macron for the first state dinner of his presidency, the war in Ukraine is entering its darkest hour, with Ukrainians racing to repair energy and water infrastructure, and more.
On today's Front Page: President Biden and congressional Democrats moved with Republicans to impose a freight rail agreement on balky labor unions, personal injury law firms stand to make billions of dollars from Camp Lejeune lawsuits, and more.
On today's Front Page: President Biden is urging Congress to impose a labor agreement on railroad companies, geopolitical tensions will loom large when the Iranian and U.S. men’s soccer teams face off in the World Cup, and more.
On today's Front Page: A planned border fence to separate Finland from Russia looks to be a major geopolitical statement, small businesses could be shut out of government contracts because of compliance costs imposed under a proposed rule, and more.
On today's Front Page: An under-the-radar fight between the Biden administration and an independent Afghanistan inspector general will soon be thrust into the spotlight, the Commanders could be in for another rebrand under a new owner, and more.
On today's Front Page: Oil and gas leasing sales that fund the Great American Outdoors Act have slowed to a trickle, Democrats are set to benefit from early voting this Saturday in Georgia, and more.
On today's Front Page: An influential railroad workers union has rejected a labor deal, raising the threat of a strike before Christmas, the Supreme Court steps into a debate over the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and more.
On today's Front Page: FIFA President Gianni Infantino defends Qatar’s World Cup preparations, high inflation and rising interest rates are creating one of the worst housing markets since the 2008 crash, and more.
On today's Front Page: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi will step aside after nearly two decades leading House Democrats, Qatar moves from obscurity to center stage as the World Cup kicks off, and more.
On today's Front Page: Republicans have clinched a majority in the House of Representatives, though their margin will be slim, Legislation to enshrine marriage equality into federal law cleared a key Senate hurdle, and more.
On today's Front Page: Top European leaders say the missile that killed two people in Poland appears to be an unfortunate accident, former President Trump announces his 2024 presidential campaign amid a divided Republican Party, and more.
On today's Front Page: President Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping sought to thaw tensions in a meeting at the G20 summit, Google will pay a $391.5 million settlement to 40 states to resolve accusations of location tracking, and more.
On today's Front Page: Republicans are finger-pointing at party leaders after big midterm election wins never materialized, legal experts say the D.C. Attorney General’s attempt to punish the Commanders is unlikely to stand up in court, and more.