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The Trump Administration has asked Congress to rescind funds for NPR/PBS and Foreign aid. Congress has until the end of the ...
In states without policies to drive renewable energy, power prices could surge as federal tax incentives for clean energy ...
After a bad breakup, writer Melissa Febos decided to abstain from sex and dating for a year. She didn't realize how much it ...
An appeals court late Monday stepped in to keep in place protections for nearly 12,000 Afghans that have allowed them to work ...
NPR speaks with Marc Caputo, a senior politics reporter for Axios, about Trump's recent change in approach toward Russia and Vladimir Putin.
NPR's Sarah McCammon talks with Ernie Tedeschi, director of economics at The Budget Lab at Yale, about the potential impact of President Trump's tariffs on low-income households.
With elections coming in Japan, the threat of U.S. tariffs is forcing its prime minister to start talking tougher, and is getting people to rethink long-held assumptions about relations with the U.S.
Recent storms have slowed recovery efforts in central Texas following the July 4 floods that killed more than 130 people. About 14,000 volunteers are searching for at least 100 people still missing.
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Georgetown University law professor Stephen Vladeck about a recent pattern within the Supreme Court majority: issuing rulings with no written opinion.
As Congress debates whether to pull back all federal funds it has already committed to public broadcasting, NPR and PBS station officials in rural areas are watching closely.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday that the Trump administration can resume its dismantling of the Department of Education.
President Trump once boasted of a great relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Now Trump is criticizing him for failing to strike a deal to end the war in Ukraine.
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