NPR's Juana Summers talks with Susan Page, the author of Madam Speaker: Nancy Pelosi and the Lessons of Power about Pelosi's legacy, following the congresswoman's decision not to seek reelection.
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with domestic extremism correspondent Odette Yousef about Tucker Carlson's interview with white nationalist and holocaust denier Nick Fuentes and the rift it's creating.
The Trump administration is using different tactics that his predecessor to get the states the share the Colorado river to agree how to do it in a climate changed world.
A Rhode Island federal judge has ordered the Trump administration to find enough money to restore full funding for SNAP benefits by Friday.
Planetary science is in limbo during the government shutdown — things like analyzing asteroids, studying the magnetosphere of Jupiter, or better understanding Mars so that humans might one day visit.
A new rule change means new artists are hitting the top 10.
Sometimes we buy things that we later regret spending on. But with a few pointed questions, you can make sure you've done your due diligence and buy something guilt-free.
For a decade, political support for Israel has come from conservative Christians. But now isolationism and antisemitism are changing the tone.
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with David Kinzelman, senior vice president of airport operations at United Airlines, about new FAA restrictions on flights during the government shutdown.
Starting with this year's nominations, the Grammy Awards will split its prize for country album of the year into two distinct categories: traditional and contemporary.
The court's decision is not a final ruling, however; it just permits Trump's passport policy to go into effect while ...
The verdict comes after the case came to represent broader resistance in the nation's capital to the Trump administration's ...
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