An NPR investigation finds federal judges have enormous influence with few checks on their power. Law clerks and other ...
Hamas says it is not willing to extend the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire, rejecting an Israeli request to delay ...
An NPR review of new data added to DOGE's "wall of receipts" finds the group quietly changed previous errors, added new ones ...
Voice of America is reviewing the social media posts of a reporter for possible bias against the Trump Administration. The ...
Federal employees have received a second email from the Office of Personnel Management asking them what they did last week.
NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Eugene Ludwig, former Comptroller of the Currency, about how some government statistics get the economy wrong.
It's well known that President Trump is a devotee of professional wrestling. Pundits often describe his moves in the White House in wrestling terms: smackdowns, cage fights and so on. We ask how the ...
We look at the anticipated impact of of the USAID funding freeze, which helped some of the poorest people around the world. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to weigh in on the matter.
Thousands demonstrate in Greece on anniversary of deadly train crash that killed 57 and injured scores more in 2023.
NPR's Scott Simon talks with Michele Steele of ESPN about basketball legend Diana Taurasi's retirement, drama in the NBA, and a political statement by Canada's men's national soccer team coach.
NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Johns Hopkins professor Sergey Radchenko about what Russia hopes to gain from negotiations with the United States over ending its war in Ukraine.
We look at the response in Ukraine to Fridays shambolic press conference at the Oval Office between President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and President Trump.
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