News

Two majority Black cities in Alabama now have Black representation in Congress because of court-ordered redistricting. The ...
The VA Servicing Purchase program has helped about 20,000 veterans avoid foreclosure. But Republicans in Congress have been ...
Acting President Han Duck-soo has emerged as a potential conservative standard bearer, and South Korean media reported he ...
The U.S. economy contracted in the first three months of the year. Economists warn the months to come could also be challenging if President Trump's tariffs remain in place.
Kamala Harris had centered her closing argument of her unsuccessful presidential campaign on the dangers posed by Trump.
Officials from Japan and South Korea are in Washington this week for trade negotiations. NPR looks at how South Korea, a U.S. ally and export powerhouse, is coping with Trump's tariffs.
Politicians, lawyers and journalists who left behind autocratic systems in Europe, Asia and Latin America see the Trump ...
NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with former Hollywood agent Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas about her novel "Climbing in Heels," which follows the path of three women secretaries at a Hollywood agency in the '80s.
NPR's Michel Martin talks with the Department of Homeland Security's top spokesperson, Trisha McLaughlin, about the Trump administration's immigration and border security efforts after 100 days.
Is private philanthropy an option to fill the gaps in funding for universities seeing federal funding threatened or frozen? NPR asks New York Times reporter Teddy Schleifer.
Beyonce's "Cowboy Carter" tour kicked off this week in Los Angeles, and fans are going all out to capture the tour's Western fashion aesthetic.
California, which has the unique ability to set vehicle standards, has an ambitious rule requiring all new cars to be zero-emission by 2035. But the rule's future is contested.