News

Congress returns from a two-week recess with a massive item on its to-do list: budget reconciliation. Lawmakers barely passed ...
President Trump's second term, DOGE hasn't delivered on its promised savings, efficiency or transparency in meaningful ways.
President Trump has long been a critic of NATO and believes Europe does not contribute enough to its own defense. NATO ...
One person has died and several were injured Sunday when a boat crashed into a ferry off the Memorial Causeway Bridge and ...
The North Korean announcement came two days after Russia said its troops have fully reclaimed the Kursk region. Ukrainian ...
The measles outbreak is not easing up around the country. The CDC reports 884 confirmed cases nationwide, three times the number of cases in 2024. In West Texas, where the outbreak started, ...
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, about the geopolitical ramifications of Saturday's port explosion in Iran that ...
Hundreds of thousands of people depend on the U.N. agency for food. It's been eight weeks since Israel blocked aid. The U.N. has run out of supplies for charity kitchens as aid sits across the border.
Job loss and financial stress can damage mental and physical health. Research shows there are ways to help. The way people think about a financial set back is sometimes as important as the money.
The federal government has cancelled about 11 billion dollars worth of university research funding, and is threatening to cut more. When the federal government stops funding research, there's no one ...
NPR's Steve Inskeep asks Democratic state lawmaker Ryan Clancy about the arrest of a Wisconsin judge, accused of concealing a person without legal status from ICE agents who'd entered the courthouse.
NPR's Michel Martin asks Elora Mukherjee, of the Immigrants' Rights Clinic at Columbia Law School, about Trump administration efforts to revoke the legal status of student visa holders.