Across Pennsylvania|News|
Is The Manhattan DA's Case Against Trump Well-Founded Or A Political Sham?
Is the 34-count indictment against former President Donald Trump weak or a formidable legal morass.

Delaware Valley Journal provides unbiased, local reporting for the Philadelphia suburbs of Bucks, Chester, Delaware and Montgomery Counties.
Is the 34-count indictment against former President Donald Trump weak or a formidable legal morass.

Three Republicans and five Democrats will be on the primary election ballot on May 16.
State Police and dozens of police departments across southeast Pennsylvania have teamed up to target drivers breaking traffic laws.
An inmate at the Delaware County prison died by suicide this month, county officials confirmed.
Fetterman, who spent six weeks hospitalized for depression, was working from the hospital, his staff said.
National Democrats are vowing to advance party control throughout the U.S. in 2024.
Florida governor Ron DeSantis, a shadow presidential candidate, recently minimized the salience of continued U.S. support to Ukraine.
A Bucks County state senator wants to codify a ban on “assault weapons” in Pennsylvania law for the second time in less than 12 months.
Imagine, in this time of school shootings discovering your 13-year-old daughter was added to a hit list drawn up by her fellow students.
This new era of exploration is brimming with potential.
Is it a dark day in history, or is justice being served?
The green-energy plan will increase energy costs by billions over the next decade.
Breast cancer continues to be the second cause of death in women.
Since 1964 the Sons of the Desert has celebrated Laurel and Hardy’s legacy, bringing fans together for fun and frivolity.
Sen. Bob Casey delayed reporting raises numerous ethical questions.
Two-parent households are “an institution whose primary path is raising and socializing children.”
The National Institutes of Health extensively studied father absenteeism and its effects on children.
The project will begin once the plant has secured Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection permits.
People across Philadelphia think addressing the opioid crisis should be a top priority for the next mayor.
State Rep. John Lawrence says he has had enough.