News

U.S. Judge Trevor N. McFadden rules the White House cannot deny the Associated Press access to news events because the wire ...
Chinese electric car sales to Latin America are booming, especially in Brazil. And China is also building EVs there, investing nearly a billion dollars at one car plant. But there have been troubles.
A new report from a left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities finds that upcoming changes to Social Security will ...
The Internal Revenue Service reached a deal to share tax information about some immigrants without legal status, marking a ...
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with Caitlin Rivers of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health about long-term implications of measles outbreaks in West Texas, New Mexico and a dozen other states.
A bipartisan push in Congress could bring new hope to young farmers in Missouri and beyond. A newly introduced bill would ...
Storms have caused flooding and deaths in the Midwest and South over the past several days. Kentucky was one of the hard-hit areas, and some creeks and rivers are still on the rise.
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with author Jennifer Weiner about her latest book -- The Griffin Sisters' Greatest Hits.
An executive order signed by President Trump making English the official language of the U.S. has immigrant advocates worried the move risks real harm for people with limited English proficiency.
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with GOP Rep. Jeff Hurd of Colorado about a bill he is co-sponsoring that would limit the president's authority on tariffs and require congressional approval for the measures.
We look at what President Trump's treasury and commerce secretaries have been saying about his major gamble on the economy: tariffs.
These judges, and their staff, are caught in the crosshairs of Trump's twin efforts to increase deportations — and reduce the size of the federal government.